Saturday, 13 June 2026

 


Under Water Tablets

Finding inexpensive underwater tablets can be a bit challenging, as they often come with higher price tags due to their specialized features. However, here are some options that are relatively more affordable:

  1. VANKYO MatrixPad S20
  2. Dragon Touch Notepad K10
  3. CHUWI Hi10 XR
  4. Fusion5 10.1" Android Tablet
  5. Lenovo Tab M10 HD
  6. Vankyo MatrixPad Z4
  7. RCA Viking Pro 10
  8. Contixo V8–2 Android Tablet
  9. AOYODKG M10 Android Tablet
  10. Winnovo T10 Tablet



VANKYO MatrixPad S20

“The MatrixPad S20 is rather like a politician’s promise: attractive at first glance, inexpensive to acquire, and increasingly disappointing the longer one spends with it. It performs the basic duties of a tablet with all the enthusiasm of a civil servant awaiting retirement. Suitable for reading emails, perhaps, but one hesitates to ask anything ambitious of it.”

Dragon Touch Notepad K10

“An intriguing specimen from the Republic of Low Expectations. For the price, one receives a surprisingly competent screen and enough power to browse, read, and consume media. Yet the cameras appear to have been included merely to satisfy a legal requirement, and demanding games regard the device with open contempt.”

CHUWI Hi10 XR

“Now here we encounter a tablet that actually attempts something beyond mere existence. A Windows device with a respectable display, keyboard support, pen input, and specifications that suggest genuine aspirations. Not quite a Surface, but then neither is a provincial theatre the Royal Shakespeare Company. Remarkably good value, nonetheless.”

Fusion5 10.1" Android Tablet

“Fusion5’s principal virtue is that it is available for purchase. Beyond this, one searches in vain for distinguishing characteristics. It occupies that vast middle ground between terrible and memorable — a tablet one buys because it exists and forgets because it does.”

Lenovo Tab M10 HD

“Ah, civilization at last. Lenovo understands that a tablet should not feel as though it were assembled from leftover refrigerator parts. The M10 HD is no thoroughbred, but it is reliable, competently engineered, and possessed of that increasingly rare quality: dignity.”

Vankyo MatrixPad Z4

“The Z4 is the S20’s younger cousin who has inherited all the family’s limitations but none of its maturity. Perfectly adequate for children, casual video viewing, and those who regard technology as a regrettable necessity rather than a pleasure.”

RCA Viking Pro 10

“A relic from an earlier technological epoch. One admires its persistence in much the same way one admires an elderly typewriter still being used in a government office. Functional, occasionally charming, but impossible to recommend without an accompanying lecture on modern alternatives.”

Contixo V8–2

“Contixo appears to have asked itself the question, ‘How inexpensive can a tablet become before it ceases to be a tablet?’ The answer, apparently, is the V8–2. It is useful chiefly as evidence that manufacturing tolerances can still be lowered.”

AOYODKG M10 Android Tablet

“One of those products whose very name sounds as though it was generated by a cat walking across a keyboard. Specifications may appear impressive on paper, but one approaches such devices as one approaches miracle cures and cryptocurrency evangelists — with caution and a hand on one’s wallet.”

Winnovo T10 Tablet

“The Winnovo T10 commits no catastrophic sins, which in this price category already places it among the better-behaved participants. It is neither exciting nor dreadful. It simply exists, carrying out mundane digital tasks while inspiring no particular affection.”

  • Lenovo Tab M10 HD ($160–250): “The only one here whose price bears a vaguely rational relationship to its quality.”
  • CHUWI Hi10 XR ($150–300 used): “A surprisingly capable machine hiding among mediocrities.”
  • VANKYO S20 ($140–200 new): “One pays rather a lot for nostalgia and a logo.”
  • Vankyo Z4 ($100–180): “At this price it approaches acceptability, though not distinction.”
  • RCA Viking Pro ($90–150): “A museum piece whose value should be assessed by archaeologists.”
  • Contixo V8–2 ($70–120): “Suitable for children, luggage tests, or both.”
  • AOYODKG M10 ($120–180): “A device whose name inspires less confidence than its specifications.”
  • Winnovo T10 ($100–150): “Neither memorable enough to praise nor dreadful enough to mock properly.”

If your goal is the best tablet for the money in 2026, I would not buy any of the Vankyo, RCA, Contixo, AOYODKG, or Winnovo models unless they were under about $75 CAD. The Lenovo Tab M10 HD remains the safest choice, and the CHUWI Hi10 XR is the most interesting if you specifically want a Windows tablet.



  



On paper, it is simple enough: the world’s biggest football tournament arrives in Canada, shared across three nations, promising accessibility, global unity, and civic pride. In practice, it increasingly resembles something rather different — a carefully tiered system of access in which the experience of “being there” depends less on passion for the game than on one’s willingness to absorb what can only be described as escalating financial astonishment.

Let us begin with the official structure, because it is here that the story starts to fracture.

When FIFA first opened ticket sales, it introduced a tiered pricing system that already placed the event far outside the reach of the casual supporter. Category 4 tickets — the supposed entry point — were priced at roughly $1,300 CAD. Category 3, 2, and 1 climbed steadily from there, with most mid-tier seats falling somewhere between $1,500 and $2,500 CAD, while premium Category 1 seats reached approximately $3,000 CAD.

Even at this stage, the language of “global accessibility” began to feel slightly strained.

But the structure did not stop there.

FIFA later introduced a new classification — almost as an afterthought, though with rather significant consequences — called “Front Category 1.” These were positioned as the best seats in the stadium: front-row, prime sightlines, the kind of vantage point one would assume had already been included in the highest tier. They were not. Instead, they were priced at at least double Category 1, meaning $6,000 CAD and upward for a single match.

At this point, one begins to suspect that “category” is no longer a description of seating, but of social permission.

Then comes the matter of allocation. Fans were not always buying specific seats, but rather zones within stadiums — broad regions in which their eventual position would be determined later. In theory, this is efficient. In practice, it produces a peculiar kind of post-purchase anxiety: paying premium prices only to discover that one’s “Category 1” experience might involve corners, obstructions, or placements far removed from the imagined prestige of the purchase.

And then, almost inevitably, came revision.

After initial sales, FIFA began releasing additional “last-minute” ticket batches across all 104 matches, including fixtures that had previously been described as nearing capacity. This included high-profile games and so-called “flagship” matches, undermining the earlier sense that availability was genuinely scarce.

This is where the language becomes interesting. “Last-minute release” sounds like responsiveness. “Additional inventory” sounds like logistics. But to many fans, it felt like something closer to retroactive supply adjustment — an attempt to reconcile pricing ambition with actual demand.

The reaction, predictably, was not enthusiasm.

Supporters who had already purchased tickets in earlier rounds expressed frustration at what they saw as shifting rules. Some had paid top-tier prices under the assumption of scarcity, only to see new waves of tickets appear later. Others pointed out that if seats were still being released at scale, earlier pricing may have been calibrated more toward projection than reality.

The criticism was sharpened further by FIFA’s adoption of dynamic pricing, a system in which costs fluctuate based on demand. In principle, this mirrors airlines or concerts. In practice, it introduces volatility into what many still consider a civic or cultural event. Prices rise, shift, and segment in ways that make the final cost of attendance less predictable than ever.

The resale market completes the picture.

Tickets that originally cost $1,300 CAD in Category 4 have appeared on secondary platforms for significantly more. Mid-tier tickets in the $1,600–$2,000 CAD range have become common starting points for resale listings. Category 1 seats, originally around $3,000 CAD, have reportedly been listed for as much as $62,000 CAD in extreme cases.

At this point, we are no longer discussing pricing. We are discussing altitude.

All of this sits beneath the administrative umbrella of FIFA and its president, Gianni Infantino, who has overseen an expanded tournament structure featuring 48 teams and three host nations. The intention, at least rhetorically, is inclusion: more nations, more matches, more access. Yet the lived experience of ticket acquisition suggests a different reality — one in which expansion has been accompanied not by democratization, but by segmentation.

And so we return to Toronto.

What does it mean to host a “global game” in a city where ordinary fans increasingly find themselves priced out at the point of entry? What does it mean to speak of civic pride when attendance is stratified into financial tiers that escalate from the expensive to the prohibitive?

There is, of course, a technical defense available. Markets respond to demand. Premium experiences cost premium money. Not every seat can be cheap. All of this is true in a narrow sense, and irrelevant in a larger one.

Because the underlying question is not whether tickets cost money. It is whether the structure of pricing still bears any meaningful relationship to the idea of a shared public event.

If football is becoming a hierarchy of access codes, dynamic pricing curves, and post hoc ticket releases, then what is being staged is no longer simply a tournament. It is a filtering mechanism. A system that determines not just who watches, but who is meant to.

And Toronto, for all its openness and self-image as a welcoming global city, becomes in this arrangement not a home for the world game, but a showroom for its segmentation.

One is left, finally, with a rather uncomfortable thought: that the most universal sport in the world is being reorganized into something rather less universal in practice — an experience still spoken of in the language of the public, but increasingly delivered in the logic of exclusivity.

Or, to put it less gently, the game remains global.

It is just no longer clear that the seats are.

Wednesday, 10 June 2026

  


The Meanings of Kamibushi

Kamibushi is not tied to a single written form. Like many Japanese-derived names, its meaning shifts depending on the characters used. This ambiguity is not a weakness but a strength, allowing the name to function as a conceptual lens through which photography, culture, and observation can be understood.

One interpretation is 神武士 (Kami-Bushi), meaning "Divine Warrior" or "Spirit Warrior." Here, kami refers to spirit, presence, or the unseen forces that animate the world, while bushi refers to a warrior. In the context of photography, the Kamibushi becomes a witness who confronts reality directly and returns with evidence. The camera becomes a tool not of conquest but of observation.

A second interpretation is 神節, which can be understood as "Sacred Rhythm" or "Spirit Rhythm." This reading shifts attention away from conflict and toward patterns. Cultures move in rhythms. Trends emerge, rise, and disappear. Political moods, fashions, technologies, and collective anxieties all have a cadence. Photography becomes the act of recognizing and preserving these rhythms before they vanish.

A third interpretation is 紙武士, meaning "Paper Warrior." Historically, photographers, writers, journalists, and artists have often been warriors of paper rather than warriors of steel. Their weapons are documents, images, stories, archives, and records. They preserve what would otherwise be forgotten. In this sense, every photograph is a small act of resistance against disappearance.

Together, these interpretations form a useful framework for Kamibushi Photography. The Spirit Warrior seeks the unseen forces shaping society. The Sacred Rhythm observes the patterns through which those forces move. The Paper Warrior preserves their traces for future generations. Photography becomes more than image-making. It becomes the documentation of the zeitgeist—the spirit of the age—and an attempt to understand how invisible cultural forces reveal themselves through visible signs.

Rather than choosing one meaning, Kamibushi Photography embraces all three. The name itself becomes a reminder that reality is rarely singular. Every image contains multiple stories, every era contains competing spirits, and every act of documentation is both observation and interpretation.

Monday, 8 June 2026

 


              TRINITY PARK ANJULIE DISCUSSION

Anjulie at Trinity Park

There is a way to write about pop music as if it is already happening on a screen that never turns off. Not history. Not biography. Just repetition, shimmer, branding, memory, and sound looping back into itself like a commercial that forgot what it was selling.

Anjulie appears in that space like a signal cut from the early digital air of the late 2000s—when pop music was still trying to decide if it wanted to be human or software. She arrives not as a single “voice” in the old sense, but as a series of frames: club lights, MySpace-era glow, neon hooks, the feeling of hearing a song in a car at night and not knowing if it is sadness or advertising.

She is Canadian, yes, but geography in pop is mostly texture. What matters more is frequency. Her early work slides into the electro-pop ecosystem at a moment when everything is flattening into high-gloss surfaces: synths, hooks, repetition. “Boom” is not just a song title, it is an event. A pop object that announces itself like a billboard that learned how to dance. The voice inside it is light but edged, like something smiling while being watched.

 “Love Songs” becomes less a track and more a category of feeling packaged into a clean, playable loop. “Brand New Bitch” is not just a declaration; it is typography in motion, identity as a slogan that keeps reprinting itself in different colours.

The surface becomes the subject. The subject becomes the surface. There is no “behind the music” because the music is already in front of everything, like a screen.

She moves through the 2010s not as a traditional album-to-album narrative arc, but like a series of installations. Each song is a room. Each hook is a neon object placed carefully in the center so that you don’t have to walk anywhere else. “Headphones” feels like isolation made audible—private sound in a public world, the listener disappearing into their own echo. “Rain” slows the palette down, but even sadness is polished, glossy, consumable. Emotional content becomes design.

Collaboration is AnJulie. No single image belongs to one hand. In Anjulie’s case, the pop ecosystem itself is the collaborator: producers, DJs, sync placements, streaming algorithms, television editors choosing the exact 12 seconds of her voice that will repeat under a montage of someone running through a city at night. The artist becomes both source and material.

Anjulie’s work spreads less like a narrative and more like ink in water. You don’t track it linearly. You notice it appearing in places you didn’t expect: a show, a playlist, a background track in a memory you didn’t realize had music attached to it.

The voice itself is important because it refuses to over-explain. It does not insist on autobiography in the traditional singer-songwriter sense. Instead, it performs identity as modulation. Sometimes assertive, sometimes distant, sometimes ironic, sometimes vulnerable, but always slightly detached—as if the emotion is being broadcast and observed at the same time.

The removal of moral hierarchy from expression. A love song is not more important than a brand song. A breakup anthem is not more “real” than a dance hook. Everything becomes equal under repetition. Everything becomes pop.

By the time you arrive at the later phase of her work, the idea of “hits” itself feels like a design flaw in the language. A hit implies a peak, a moment of impact. But Anjulie’s catalogue behaves more like a continuous surface. Not peaks, but waves. Not arrival, but recurrence. Songs that keep returning in different contexts, like they were never fully released—just gradually leaked into culture.

Even recognition in the formal sense—awards, nominations, industry acknowledgment—feels in this framing less like achievement and more like additional layers of print. Another version of the image. Another press run. Another copy of the same face in a slightly different color palette.

And then there is the strange softness underneath all the gloss. Repetition does not erase feeling—it just distributes it. Anjulie’s music carries that distributed emotional field: empowerment, longing, distance, irony, warmth. None of it fixed. All of it circulating.

If you zoom out far enough, she becomes less a person in a conventional biography and more a set of recurring cultural signals: hooks that reappear, phrases that stick, moods that get reactivated when a track starts playing somewhere you didn’t expect.

Nothing ends, it only gets replayed.

Anjulie does not resolve into a “greatest hits” list in this space. She becomes something closer to a looping exhibit—songs as objects, voice as print, identity as repetition that never fully settles. The music does not conclude. It just restarts softly in another room, on another device, under another life that thinks it is separate from the sound but isn’t.

Appendix: Selected Career Achievements — Anjulie

Released debut studio album Anjulie on August 4, 2009, under Hear Music/Universal Republic, marking her formal entry into the major-label pop system at the tail end of the MySpace-to-streaming transition era

Released breakout single “Boom” in 2009, which reached Billboard chart placement in the U.S. dance/electronic space and became one of her most recognizable early tracks across radio and club rotation

Released “Love Songs” in 2010, which charted on Billboard’s Hot Dance Club Songs chart and expanded her presence in U.S. dance-pop circulation

Released “Brand New Bitch” in 2011, which also entered Billboard’s dance chart ecosystem and became a recurring sync/club track in the early 2010s pop cycle

Released “Headphones” in 2012, further consolidating her electro-pop identity during the peak streaming transition period, with sustained use in media placements and curated playlists

Accumulated tens of millions of streams across major platforms for core catalogue tracks such as “Boom,” “Love Songs,” and “Brand New Bitch,” with long-tail streaming continuing years after initial release rather than concentrated peak-era consumption

Maintained ongoing independent release activity through the 2010s and 2020s, including EPs and standalone singles outside a traditional album-only cycle, reflecting post-album industry distribution patterns

Her catalogue has been licensed across television, advertising, and digital media, contributing to recurring synchronization revenue streams typical of mid-tier pop catalogues with strong licensing value rather than one-time blockbuster chart dominance

Performed live across North American club circuits and festival-adjacent venues throughout the 2010s, operating within a touring model aligned with electronic-pop and DJ-supported performance formats rather than stadium-scale touring structures

Sustained industry presence across songwriting and collaborative production networks, contributing to pop-writing ecosystems in Canada and the U.S., particularly in LA and Toronto-based pop production circles


Full CIRCLE

 

There is a temptation, especially in retrospect, to believe that cultural life forms a kind of elegant chain—each link leading logically to the next, as though meaning were something carefully engineered rather than accidentally stumbled into while holding a camera.

Your first real encounter with that world came through photographing Jayde Nicole, a figure suspended in one of those late-era media ecosystems where reality television, fashion imagery, and celebrity branding all blur into a single circulating surface. She wasn’t so much “a subject” as a node—someone briefly illuminated by a machine that is always looking for something attractive to reflect itself back at an audience.

That machine, of course, has its cathedral, and it was called The Hills. A show so carefully unbothered by reality that it accidentally invented a new genre: emotionally air-conditioned life. Nothing sweated, nothing stuttered, everything arrived pre-composed, like a sentence written after the conclusion of its own argument.

And yet somewhere in that same atmospheric layer of pop culture drifted Anjulie, who turns out to be the most interesting kind of anomaly: someone who actually writes the music that all those glossy scenes pretend to generate on their own.

Her songs didn’t just sit in the background of that era—they understood the background. Tracks like “Boom” and “Rain” carried the strange distinction of being both commercially polished and emotionally alert, which is a rarer combination than it should be. She’s one of those artists who can pass through the machinery of television placement and radio rotation without being flattened by it. In fact, she improves the room.

So the chain goes: fashion photograph → reality television glow → pop-cultural diffusion → Anjulie in a park, speaking like someone who has survived being turned into atmosphere and returned intact.

And that is where the joke quietly reverses itself.

Because all the supposed glamour of the earlier links—the curated personalities, the manufactured intimacy, the soft-focus drama of being “seen”—turns out to be far less vivid than a single real conversation with someone like Anjulie. The machine can broadcast her voice, but it cannot quite explain why it feels more precise in person.

The final irony is that you don’t move from reality to illusion along this chain. You move, instead, from illusion toward something unexpectedly grounded. And standing there in the park, camera or no camera, it becomes hard to avoid the suspicion that the most “real” figure in the entire sequence is the one who was making the soundtrack all along.

 
 
 
CITIZENCANADA,Social Media,Zeitgeist,Wonder,VIP,ブリトニースピアーズ,
 
https://zeitgeistpublishing.blogspot.com/2026/06/full-circle-there-is-temptation.html 
 


Friday, 5 June 2026

Anjulie: Fame in the Shadows of the Feed

 




Anjulie: Fame in the Shadows of the Feed

Anjulie is famous, but not in the way you’re used to. Not algorithm-famous, not trending-on-TikTok famous. She's from the strange in-between: too visible to be underground, too independent to be fully pop. She writes the songs that blow up without her name attached, then posts a sketch of a barefoot girl holding a flower on Instagram instead of a thirst trap. She’s the kind of artist you’ve heard a hundred times but never Googled.

That’s not an accident.

She came up through MySpace—before “followers” had metrics and before going viral was a business model. Back then, she made her own flyers and burned her own CDs. A self-taught engineer, visual artist, and songwriter, she was gaming the attention economy before the term existed. Her breakout single Boom slipped onto The Vampire Diaries and Melrose Place, not because she had a team pushing her, but because her music pulsed with something real in a time of lip gloss and dance beats.

Later, Brand New Bitch—a platinum-certified, Juno-nominated track—rode club speakers and feminist rage to anthem status, even as Anjulie herself stepped back from the spotlight. She didn’t chase fame; she licensed it. She lent her voice, her pen, her sonic fingerprint to the avatars of bigger pop stars: Nicki Minaj, Icona Pop, Kelly Clarkson. Their faces, her hooks. They danced in the foreground. She ghosted in the background.

There’s something uncanny about Anjulie’s brand of presence. She posts animations she draws herself. She designs entire visual worlds for her singles. On socials, she’s an auteur, not an influencer—more zine than billboard. Even her Juno win for “You and I” barely made a ripple compared to the noise of lesser artists who simply play the algorithm better.

In another timeline, Anjulie would be a household name. In this one, she’s a whisper in the feed—a genius hiding in plain sight, too thoughtful for the churn, too visceral to vanish completely.

She just dropped a new album, Loveless Metropolis, with little fanfare. No dance challenge. No drama. Just music. She’s still out here—writing, animating, posting—and somehow, still refusing to be content.



2026,fame,FANDOM,FILM,music,POP STARS,psychohistory,Propaganda,TORONTO,TRENDS,unique,youtube,ZENO,

Tuesday, 2 June 2026

CITIZEN CANADA FIELD REPORT 📸 "ANIME NORTH 2026: HIGH COSPLAY PRESSURE SYSTEM"

 





CITIZEN CANADA FIELD REPORT 📸
"ANIME NORTH 2026: HIGH COSPLAY PRESSURE SYSTEM"

🗞️ You no attend convention. Convention attend you.

Parking full.
Hotels full.
Hallways full.

Energy somehow still increasing.

Not a gathering. Not a trend.

More like a temporary city built from imagination, craftsmanship, caffeine, and shared obsessions.


INSIDE THIS PAGE:

🎭 "Cosplay Civilization." — Thousands of hours of work transformed into a few unforgettable days. Sewing, armor building, makeup, engineering, performance.

📸 "Camera Density Event." — Every corridor becomes a studio. Every staircase becomes a photoshoot.

🛍️ "Vendor Hall Economics." — The rare example of people being genuinely excited to spend money.

🎮 "Fandom Infrastructure." — Panels, artists, games, meetups, concerts, and communities operating like a small city.

🌸 "Temporary Utopia." — People from different backgrounds finding common language through stories, characters, and shared interests.

📺 "Greatguyaaa Signal." — The internet often rewards outrage. Anime North rewards enthusiasm. One weekend dedicated to liking things openly.

🧠 "Scholx Layer." — Conventions are cultural snapshots. What people cosplay, discuss, buy, and photograph becomes a record of the spirit of the age.




Funny thing:

People still ask why conventions matter.

Then 35,000 people voluntarily leave their homes, travel across provinces, spend months preparing costumes, and stand in line just to share something they love.

Not escape.

Not avoidance.

Participation.

That's the real signal.


📸 Field notes from #GreatguyTV

#AnimeNorth #AnimeNorth2026 #Cosplay #Toronto #AnimeConvention #CosplayPhotography #GreatguyTV #Greatguyaaa #CitizenCanada #Scholx #Photography #Fandom #CreatorCulture #Community #TorontoEvents

Subscribe, endure, and engage if you dare to witness more curated curiosities from the algorithmic abyss.

Keywords: Anime North, Toronto convention, cosplay culture, fandom community, convention photography, creator culture, cultural observations, GreatguyTV

#cane #DigitalDetritus #AnimeNorth #CosplayPhotography #CulturalWeather #CitizenCanada




https://pop-the-cherry-say-i.blogspot.com/2026/06/citizen-canada-field-report-anime-north.html

https://pop-the-cherry-say-i.blogspot.com/2026/06/citizen-canada-field-report-anime-north.html



  Sophie POwers Toronto Artist 

Monday, 1 June 2026

 


What Is Kamibushi Photography?

Kamibushi Photography is the documentation of the zeitgeist—the spirit of the age.  Ed Scholz  derived it from two Japanese concepts: kami (spirit, presence, or animating force) and bushi (warrior). Taken together, Kamibushi can be understood as "the warrior of the spirit" or "the warrior who engages with the unseen forces shaping the world." It is not a warrior in the military sense, but in the older sense of one who confronts reality directly, enters uncertainty willingly, and returns with knowledge. If the zeitgeist is the wild and often invisible force moving through a society—its fashions, fears, technologies, assumptions, hopes, and obsessions—then the Kamibushi photographer is the one who tracks its movement.

Most people live inside the spirit of their age without noticing it. Like fish unaware of water, they absorb the assumptions of their time and mistake them for permanent truths. Kamibushi Photography begins with the belief that the spirit of an age can be observed through its traces. A photograph may not capture the zeitgeist directly, but it can reveal its footprints: a crowd illuminated by phone screens, an abandoned shopping mall, a protest sign, a lonely staircase in a rapidly changing city, a forest preserved while everything around it is developed. Such images become fragments of evidence, clues left behind by larger cultural forces.

The Kamibushi photographer is neither a detached observer nor a prophet claiming to stand outside history. The photographer is part of the same culture being documented, influenced by the same forces being investigated. Yet through deliberate observation, a temporary distance becomes possible. The task is not to control the zeitgeist, judge it prematurely, or force it into a political or ideological framework. The task is first to witness, then to document, and only afterward to interpret. In this sense, Kamibushi Photography treats photography as both a documentary and philosophical practice: a way of asking what forces are shaping a society and how those forces reveal themselves in everyday life.

Every photograph is both a record and a choice. The frame selects one moment and excludes another. The camera freezes motion and turns experience into an object that can be examined. Even the simplest photograph is therefore an act of interpretation. Yet Kamibushi Photography strives to let reality speak before imposing conclusions upon it. Its first loyalty is to observation. Meaning emerges later, through reflection, discussion, and historical distance.

At its core, Kamibushi Photography is the practice of entering the world as a witness to the spirit of the age. It seeks not merely beautiful images, but cultural evidence. It is interested in the visible signs of invisible forces. The goal is not to escape the zeitgeist but to recognize it, document it, and preserve its traces for those who come later. Future generations rarely understand an era through its slogans; they understand it through its artifacts, images, and forgotten details. Kamibushi Photography exists to gather those details while the herd is still moving and the dust is still in the air.

 2️⃣1️⃣ 二十一 Backstage(バックステージ)= backstage

Romaji: nijuuichi bakkusuteeji
Sentence: Bakkusuteeji de junbi shimasu.
English: I prepare backstage.
#LearnJapanese #Tdot #DOCSCHOLX #江戸門戸 #Metacognition #FashionWeek #BackstageLife






https://pop-the-cherry-say-i.blogspot.com/2026/05/backstage-backstage-romaji-nijuuichi.html

Saturday, 16 May 2026

  

COSPLAY MAGAZINE  ANIME NORTH


Sprinkle vs Drizzle Drizzle Timeline of the “Sprinkle Sprinkle” / “Drizzle Drizzle” Internet Dating Discourse



2005–2010 — Early YouTube & Forum Gender Wars

Relationship debates moved from magazines and radio shows onto forums, early YouTube, and blogs. Male-focused pickup artist communities and female dating-advice spaces began forming distinct online subcultures. The internet transformed private dating frustrations into public identity movements.

2009 — Steve Harvey publishes Act Like a Lady, Think Like a Man

The book became massively influential in mainstream relationship culture. It reinforced ideas about men as providers and dating as strategic social negotiation. Many later TikTok debates recycled concepts already popularized here.

2013–2016 — Rise of “Red Pill” and Manosphere Content

YouTube channels and podcasts centered around male dating frustration exploded in popularity. Discussions increasingly framed dating as marketplace competition rather than romance. Terms like “high value,” “hypergamy,” and “female nature” spread into wider internet culture.

2016–2019 — Instagram Luxury Femininity Era

Instagram normalized aspirational “soft life” aesthetics tied to luxury consumption and status. Dating advice became linked with branding, lifestyle presentation, and visible wealth. Relationship discourse increasingly merged with influencer culture.

Around 2020 — SheraSeven popularizes “sprinkle sprinkle”

Her videos combined humor, bluntness, luxury aesthetics, and financial strategy. “Sprinkle sprinkle” became shorthand for encouraging women to seek provider-oriented relationships and material benefit from dating. The phrase spread rapidly because it was short, repeatable, and meme-friendly.

2020–2021 — TikTok Algorithm Accelerates the Trend

Short-form video rewarded emotionally charged takes and conflict-heavy gender debates. Thousands of creators copied, reacted to, or stitched “sprinkle sprinkle” content. Dating advice became less private counseling and more public performance entertainment.

2021 — Economic Anxiety Deepens the Conversation

Inflation, housing costs, and post-pandemic instability made money central to dating discussions online. Young people increasingly debated who should pay, provide, and sacrifice in relationships. Financial insecurity amplified transactional rhetoric on all sides.

2022 — Counter-Meme Culture Emerges

Male parody responses began spreading heavily across TikTok and YouTube. The phrase “drizzle drizzle” became the best-known ironic counter-slogan mocking “sprinkle sprinkle” rhetoric. Satire accounts transformed the debate into a meme ecosystem.

2022–2023 — Andrew Tate and Adjacent Creators Expand Gender-War Content

Algorithmic recommendation systems linked dating discourse with masculinity politics and status-content ecosystems. Podcasts, reaction channels, and debate clips turned relationship disagreements into entertainment genres. Gender conflict became one of the internet’s most profitable engagement engines.

2023 — “Soft Life” Becomes Mainstream Vocabulary

The idea of avoiding struggle and seeking comfort through strategic relationships spread beyond niche communities. “Soft life” aesthetics appeared across TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube culture. Critics argued it romanticized dependency while supporters framed it as self-protection and standards.

2024 — Meme Saturation Phase

By this stage, “sprinkle sprinkle” and “drizzle drizzle” were recognizable even outside their original communities. Many users referenced the phrases ironically without knowing the original creators. The discourse became part sociology, part comedy, part performance art.

2025–2026 — Historical Reflection & Cultural Analysis

Writers and commentators increasingly began viewing the phenomenon as part of a larger transformation of intimacy under social media capitalism. Dating had become highly public, algorithmically rewarded, and financially performative. The real historical shift was not just the slogans, but the conversion of relationships into content ecosystems.




Concepts 2026,Courtship,dating,Economic,fame,FANDOM,flirting,horror,politics,SEX,woke,XXX,youtube,ZENO,

Wednesday, 13 May 2026

 








Photography


https://photography647.blogspot.com/2026/05/two-girls-one-moment-infinite-grain-by.html 


Trailers



USE AS TRAINLER


#Fleeting Perfection: The #Timeless Beauty of Exquisite Design 


The CANE on the internet


May 5, 2026  (OK intro)




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There is something almost almost theatrical in its contradiction about the way the 2026 FIFA World Cup is being prepared for Toronto. | by Charles Scholx | Apr, 2026 | Medium 



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https://pop-the-cherry-say-i.blogspot.com/2026/05/youtube-ai-discussion-on-greatguyaaa.html





Ghosting

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POP CULTURE: WORLD WAR III TRUMP EDITION


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MUSIC 2026


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Sunday, 10 May 2026

  



THE HUMAN LINE



April 2026

Table of Contents

  1. Human Hate and Animal Emotion

    • Is hate unique to humans?

    • Animal hostility vs. human narrative-based hatred

    • Emotion, memory, and identity

  2. What Makes Humans “Special”?

    • Rejecting single-trait definitions

    • Humanity as a combination of traits

    • Multiplicative feedback loops: language, abstraction, culture

  3. Early Humans and Cognitive Development

    • Gradual emergence of symbolic behavior

    • Early Homo sapiens without clear art/language evidence

    • No sharp line between “animal” and “human”

  4. Humanity as a Gradient

    • Transitional minds in evolution

    • Fuzzy boundaries of personhood and cognition

    • Species vs. psychological definitions

  5. Edge Cases in Definitions of Humanity

    • Deafness, blindness, cognitive impairment

    • Problems with trait-based humanity

    • Historical misuse (e.g., Nazi exclusionary philosophy)

  6. Modern Human Rights Framework

    • Why societies define all Homo sapiens as human

    • Ethical stability vs. philosophical precision

    • Avoiding exclusionary thresholds

  7. Alternative Model: Multiple Paths to Humanity

    • Humanity distributed across different abilities

    • “Combination of roads” concept

    • Critique: edge cases still remain

  8. Potential vs. Actual Human Traits

    • Babies, coma patients, and latent capacities

    • Continuity of identity

    • Species membership and moral status

  9. Abortion and Gradual Development

    • Continuous fetal development

    • Viability and legal thresholds

    • “Arbitrary” vs. “constructed” boundaries

  10. Coma Patients vs. Fetuses

    • Trait comparison

    • Prior personhood

    • Bodily autonomy differences

  11. Resource Burden Argument

    • Coma care and hospital resources

    • Shared societal burden vs. one-person bodily burden

    • Ethics of resource allocation

  12. Artificial Wombs and External Gestation

    • Technological replacement of pregnancy

    • Ectogenesis research

    • Changing abortion and viability debates

  13. Earliest Premature Survival

    • Modern viability threshold (~22–23 weeks)

    • Record survival cases (~21 weeks)

    • Biological reasons for current limits

  14. Historical Trend in Viability

    • Neonatal survival improvements over 100 years

    • Approximate gain: ~1 week earlier per decade

    • Impact of NICUs, computers, AI, and medical advances

  15. Future Viability Projections

    • Extrapolating 1 week earlier per decade

    • 2030s–2200s projections

    • Potential approach to 10–12 week viability

  16. Theoretical Plateau

    • Biological constraints on development

    • Organogenesis and placenta replacement

    • Limits of artificial gestation

  17. Long-Term Ethical Implications

    • Redefining pregnancy and bodily autonomy

    • Shifting definitions of personhood

    • Future legal and moral transformations around reproduction


KEY WORDS
Arthur Miller,Edmondo Scholz,metateaching,university, PHILOSOPHY