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Entertainment Editor (1988 KP) created a video about Proud in Apps
Nov 3, 2017
Entertainment Editor (1988 KP) created a video about Quip in Apps
Nov 19, 2017
Marc Andreessen recommended The 4-Hour Workweek in Books (curated)
Entertainment Editor (1988 KP) created a video about Surviving Mars in Video Games
Oct 30, 2017
Dennis Lim recommended Death by Hanging (1968) in Movies (curated)
Dennis Lim recommended Ali: Fear Eats the Soul (1974) in Movies (curated)
Entertainment Editor (1988 KP) shared own list
Nov 6, 2017 (Updated Nov 6, 2017)
Mushroom 11
Games
App
As life struggles to gain a foothold in a devastated world, a new lifeform emerges from the rubble....
Old Man's Journey
Games
App
******* Apple Design Award Winner ******** A story game about life’s precious moments, broken...
Splitter Critters
Games
App
*** Apple Design Award Winner 2017 *** Split the world with a swipe of your finger and then...
and 7 other items
Laura Linney recommended Anna Karenina in Books (curated)
KatieLouCreate (162 KP) rated Who Moved My Cheese in Books
Mar 5, 2018
Bad message (2 more)
childish
partonising
Pretentious
Well. Even just thinking about this book again riles me up. I don’t even know why I bought the book. The premise sounded interesting, I guess, and it was cheap. The book only took me around two hours to read so at least I didn’t invest a lot of time and energy into reading it.
On the one hand, I can kind of see what the book is trying to accomplish. It is a message of encouragement and productivity in life. Instead of waiting around for something and complaining about changed circumstance, we should move on and look for something better.
On the other hand, it does it in a terrible way. It feels like an adult message told in a children’s story book fashion. It feels patronising. We have a group of adults talking about how they dislike their life. One of the adults tells the story of the two mice, humans, and block of cheese, and at the end the adults realise, in an expositional way, how the story relates to their lives and how they should change it. It is oversimplified and cringy. If only it was that easy to move on if say you’ve just got fired or accused of something you didn’t do. Life, unfortunately, it not that easy. I don’t know what the author was thinking. (More over, I don’t agree with the message Johnson is giving. To me, it feels like Johnson is explaining why laborers and lower class individuals should just accept and adapt to the whims of capitalism and upper class authorities instead of fighting for what is right. But hey ho.)
On the one hand, I can kind of see what the book is trying to accomplish. It is a message of encouragement and productivity in life. Instead of waiting around for something and complaining about changed circumstance, we should move on and look for something better.
On the other hand, it does it in a terrible way. It feels like an adult message told in a children’s story book fashion. It feels patronising. We have a group of adults talking about how they dislike their life. One of the adults tells the story of the two mice, humans, and block of cheese, and at the end the adults realise, in an expositional way, how the story relates to their lives and how they should change it. It is oversimplified and cringy. If only it was that easy to move on if say you’ve just got fired or accused of something you didn’t do. Life, unfortunately, it not that easy. I don’t know what the author was thinking. (More over, I don’t agree with the message Johnson is giving. To me, it feels like Johnson is explaining why laborers and lower class individuals should just accept and adapt to the whims of capitalism and upper class authorities instead of fighting for what is right. But hey ho.)