Was digging through an old closet with my mom, found more classic art™️ and other vintage gaming stuff. But I wanted to start with this Minecraft planning sketch:
1. Insane amount of effort for a literal cube building. Hilarious.
2. The branding was on-point, even back then:
I’ll get back to you when I figure out a jail & access tunnel.
Throwback to the iconic 'He Could Be the One' episode of Hannah Montana when we were all on the edge of our seats, trying to choose between Jake or Jesse!
Crowd my frame of reference,
undo my pleasure-seeking vice dependency.
Laugh at how untalented I am
at making my fumbles seem glorious.
Do you implore a meaning I may have missed?
Or is this residue simply born of incompetence,
left to engender my arteries in salivation?
Trap my intention with your
biting wit,
or assume my survival kit was actually a Trojan horse.
Like Morse-code for crawling out of quarantine,
without the legend I'd need to
escape successfully.
Figures I'd be dangling from these
deafening heights again.
“The Children of Huang Shi,” (2008) a fact-based war drama filmed in China starring Jonathan Rhys Meyers, Radha Mitchell, Chow Yun-Fat and Michelle Yeoh.
Roger Spottiswoode’s feature tells the story of a British reporter (Rhys Meyers) in China during the country’s second invasion by Japan in 1937. He rescues 60 war orphans by leading them on a thousand-mile journey to a village near the end of China’s Great Wall with the help of a local political leader (Yun-Fat), an aristocrat (Yeoh) and the American nurse he falls in love with (Mitchell).
Where the nostalgia of a vampire's sparkle meets the glow of a golden era
Time travelled back to 2008, where the world was captivated by the timeless love story of Bella and Edward in the enchanting realm of Twilight. A cinematic journey that defined an era.
I like telling this fiction,
it's the friction of the words
that stumble out...
that ramble on about
the process of healing.
Procedure of feelings
that burdened this heart
with stories,
masters of the glory
we once held.
Capture the sky tonight
and form wondrous songs,
and I'll learn to sing along;
guiding the refrain...