I didn't know that, actually - I knew you work in comics, as it were, but I don't think I ever knew what you studied at uni. But... I guess I should've guessed, because You Know Everything about Everything.
I definitely agree with the criticism of the photo-entry that I did - I was getting all sorts of flack from people saying that videos were bad, and I kind of panicked. Adding the video was the right decision to make, in that case.
I think it's important to push that line, but part of pushing boundaries means sometimes not quite succeeding. This is so true :)
As a side note to this reply - the term "privilege" makes me incredibly uncomfortable. I've never come across it in a professional or academic context, only on the internet, and you are the only person I have ever seen use it in a more positive context. I don't really know why, but the term makes me so damn edgy. (I was once basically told - on the internet - that healthy, straight, white middle-class people shouldn't have the right to have stories published or work produced.) Do you have a link or something so that I can get an idea of what that notion really means?
I'm definitely aware of the accessibility thing, though - and whilst I've done several videos in a row, I won't be doing only those, and I have been considering other directions I can take - partly, actually, because there is No Way I could create that number of videos, potentially over many more weeks (...lol!). I guess I'm just going to have to suck it up and experiment epicly.
... Google Chrome spell check does not accept that "epicly" is a word. This upsets me greatly.
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I definitely agree with the criticism of the photo-entry that I did - I was getting all sorts of flack from people saying that videos were bad, and I kind of panicked. Adding the video was the right decision to make, in that case.
I think it's important to push that line, but part of pushing boundaries means sometimes not quite succeeding.
This is so true :)
As a side note to this reply - the term "privilege" makes me incredibly uncomfortable. I've never come across it in a professional or academic context, only on the internet, and you are the only person I have ever seen use it in a more positive context. I don't really know why, but the term makes me so damn edgy. (I was once basically told - on the internet - that healthy, straight, white middle-class people shouldn't have the right to have stories published or work produced.) Do you have a link or something so that I can get an idea of what that notion really means?
I'm definitely aware of the accessibility thing, though - and whilst I've done several videos in a row, I won't be doing only those, and I have been considering other directions I can take - partly, actually, because there is No Way I could create that number of videos, potentially over many more weeks (...lol!). I guess I'm just going to have to suck it up and experiment epicly.
... Google Chrome spell check does not accept that "epicly" is a word. This upsets me greatly.