tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1106648781852702786.post6673163127245821743..comments2023-11-10T00:18:38.053+00:00Comments on A.T.D.I.: Sabrina Alberghetti is AWESOME.James Corckhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16994731268585922124noreply@blogger.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1106648781852702786.post-12436532067979441732012-03-04T21:29:28.284+00:002012-03-04T21:29:28.284+00:00Well, we can't blame her for that now, can we?...Well, we can't blame her for that now, can we? There are things of the internet that I despise. I love the entire fandom, every single bit of it, creepy or SFW.<br /><br />I must say, using Ponibooru as an example for collaboration is not the best of the ideas. I've seen too much panic around there, to the point where if I go to Ponibooru I actually end up getting upset and I need to take a break from doing pony things.<br /><br />Although I get what you mean and I understand why you don't like her. I personally like her because, well, she's been nice to me the two times I left a comment on her profile (actually three times, because I congratulated her when The Mysterious Mare-do-Well episode was released).James Corckhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16994731268585922124noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1106648781852702786.post-17442858672828428632012-03-04T19:50:55.947+00:002012-03-04T19:50:55.947+00:00I'm afraid I don't like Sibsy. Some of th...I'm afraid I don't like Sibsy. Some of the comments she's made have been...less than enjoyable. She's gracious and seems to like the fan-base. But she also seems to have a disdain for parts of the fandom and the internet in general.<br /><br />Her unbelievably short-sighted comments on Ponibooru in particular ground my gears. She doesn't seem to understand that the fandom is a collaboration of individuals, especially on an imageboard. And it is unfair of her to make comments putting down certain sites or areas of the fandom based on poor conversations she's had with individual members.Glamadorhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11888796629047317530noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1106648781852702786.post-61769362817438409302012-02-29T17:22:15.228+00:002012-02-29T17:22:15.228+00:00I do consider it attention from above. I'm a n...I do consider it attention from above. I'm a nobody, when someone who works in something bigger than myself replies to my comment I hold it dearly.<br /><br />Though it is true what you say, which gives me hopes for posting my artwork on Deviant Art more frequently and with a more "proffesional" take on it.<br /><br />Let's hope we don't lose this in the future. Hasbro put the VA's on lock. Who knows if they will do the same to storyboard artists and animators.James Corckhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16994731268585922124noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1106648781852702786.post-40207987529583205402012-02-29T06:00:49.664+00:002012-02-29T06:00:49.664+00:00I am glad that you got such attention from above, ...I am glad that you got such attention from above, so to speak. I would like to do a little rant on something I am hypothesizing about that this falls into.<br /><br />I understand where this view of the hierarchical divide between creator and follower comes from (I am just joking that it comes from religion). The cool thing is it isn't true, these animators and writers are a lot like us, give or take particular kinds of education (for instance, I am a post-analytic philosopher in training). This is why we can simultaneously develop our talents on places like deviant art.<br /><br />I actually think that there is a good case for a correlation between non-corporate global online basis for the arts and audience-studio interaction. There is this rising of the common denominator from this flood of possibility and interest in the arts which brings the outsiders and insiders in the industry together. Maybe this online-supplemental education will lead to a renaissance in techinique, style, and medium for art.Eric J.S.https://www.blogger.com/profile/10600051893118307721noreply@blogger.com