These are the videos and they’re hilarious, especially this one.
https://bsky.app/profile/did:plc:4llrhdclvdlmmynkwsmg5tdc/post/3mphfq5b4ms2e?
Loving the burn replies on BlueSky!
I came across this one as well. This is so bad on every level. Sorry about the direct link to x, I still can’t figure out how to use xcanel on video for some reason. https://x.com/WUTangKids/status/2072006314562081073
Edit: To watch, right click and open in a new tab if a pop-up appears.
this is the internet … nothing ever disapears (except for backups in the cloud /s ) who’s gonna attach the photos ?
who’s gonna attach the photos
that’ll be me :

It’s an awful layout for a poorly planned fair.
Nobody wants to stand in the open fields during a heatwave with nothing to do. Those fields are huge too, they fit thousands of people. So the pictures were always going to be pathetic. No matter what.
That the booths are also just glorified stamp collecting with empty chairs, the entertainment sucks, and nobody wants to be affiliated is the cherry on top of the shit cake though. You can’t even get some good photos with paid extras inside.
I’m willing to bet hotels cost too much and they didn’t advertise either. Probably whoever organized it spent all their money on those ridiculous tents and pocketed the rest (or cut a deal with the tent vendor, like Parks and Rec)
That’s deader than a Discord mod’s sex life.
Extremely untrue. Especially with hard drives being unaffordable. Torrents and archives are struggling.
Even before the huge spikes in costs of hardware, I always thought of things being permanent on the 'net is a rather interesting one, given I’ve seen entire communities taken offline, never to be seen again. Maybe alphabet agencies or the people that bought up defunct companies have them, but I doubt even that.
I heard recently the rpgmaker community was going away and losing years of how-to info about rpgmaker.
You’re right that it was never true to begin with
“I’m not partaking in any celebration of this ¢untry. Not a misspelling”
That’s a direct quote from a Signal exchange with family member that has worked for the DoD most of their life. That’s where most Americans are now, in my opinion.






