To tell the truth, the article was a bit of a priss-“Rosie’s gay, oh my!” Who the hell friggin cares…
But, aside from that, I agree-I just want to give Rosie multiple swirlies so she shuts up!
“If you don’t know how to do something, you don’t know how to do it with a computer”.
Rosie epitomizes dumb-fuck American “culture”. Get some education!
No no, I meant the article-all the woman did was harp on how Rosie was gay, and a hypocrite. How? I really could care less.
But I cannot stand Rosie. She’s so annoyingly shrill.
Oprah pisses me off too.
I think this is apalling if it’s true, but I still haven’t seen a source that confirms she said this. Either way, Rosie’s a hypocrite.
Hey, cool, I just saw the movie Rain Man for the first time today.
I (also) write computer games. I’ve written 3D engines, in fact. And you can bet your ass I needed Algebra (not to mention trigonometry of course) to figure out how to make a 3D source-map of a moving plane, or an interpolated texture routine, or a spline curve routine. It’s insulting to computer programmers everywhere to say that computers equate to not requiring math.
I’ll be damned if the Intel guys who design the new computer chips don’t use Algebra either. When Rosie shows me how a computer computes 19 << 3 I’ll believe her anti-Algebra argument.
Logic? Who needs logic?
Rosie O’Donnell is pro-gun-control, because she says she doesn’t think guns should be used.
Rosie O’Donnell is also anti-gun-control, because she hires armed bodyguards for her children
(the logic is already obviously slipping, but there’s more)
Rosie O’Donnell is anti-Algebra
Ergo, anybody who is pro-gun-control OR anti-gun-control must be anti-education.
I think these are labels slapped on intrinsically similar human pursuits. To be anti-algebra is to be anti-art, because they both are modes of structuring the universe.
I’m sorry if your education taught you that these pursuits are opposed, Rosie. But obviously you are blathering from the standpoint of ignorance.
Another poster child for the failure of public schools.
Close enough. Hopefully, that book will be available for Rosie’s kids when they grow up and realize they were raised by the Pillsbury Algebra-fee Dough Girl.
I’ve worked on lots of little games and projects to do graphical things. Among them:
One of my great programming accomplishments; I made a 3D rotating gourad(sp)-shaded polyedron that could be viewed with red/cyan 3D glasses. In QBasic. In 256 colors. It gave me a headache trying to get it to work. Seems kind of like wasted effort to me now, though.
A cool bump-mapping thing - that took a lot of math. And, despite what anyone like Rosie might say, I didn’t just type “C:> make a bumpmap program” and have the computer do it automatically.
Hi, Opal!
A 3D display of a plane that repeats itself infinitely out into the horizon - not really a game, but a really cool program nonetheless.
An Asteroids clone called Guggoids. It had pretty cool graphics, but it was never a huge serious project.
A raycaster (think Wolfenstein) that used sort of the same principle behine the infinite plane display. I’m still working on that one. I used to have a webpage with my raycaster and Guggoids on it, but the server seems to be defunct.
Numerous other misc. projects.
I’m also working on a Top Secret Project which I probably shouldn’t reveal here. (¬.¬)
Believe me, our little world is just as divided about Rosie as ya’ll are, but she’s IT for us today on TV, outside a couple of obscure NYC-based theatre shows.
{BTW, she always goes to premieres with her girlfriend and everyone knows exactly who that blonde is and we just don’t gossip about it. And my very prim Mom knew for years that she’s gay and it doesn’t concern her at all.}
Tomorrow, on the Rosie show, there’ll be a performance of one of the main numbers of an immortal American musical, FOLLIES. OK, so this Roundabout production has gotten pretty mixed reviews; so it’ll be a reduced staging for that tiny space; so I live in NYC and can go down and see it with a TKTS ticket (and I have a Real Ticket already for my birthday!) But…
For us, she’s IT! There’s no more Mike Douglas show, ET doesn’t cover theatre unless a TV celebrity is up there, CNN Showbiz Today might show snippets but certainly not a full number, etc. David Letterman’s the only other one out there.
She almost single-handedly kept TITANIC (the 1997 Best Musical) afloat by having them on the show around six times. She’s had large and small shows, Broadway and Off-Broadway, men and women whose talent never gets recognized in the rest of the media because they’re not on a screen. She won my heart forever by having John Cameron Mitchell, :eek: in full drag (with Miriam Shor in male drag behind him!) perform ‘The Origin of Love’ from HEDWIG AND THE ANGRY INCH. She and John will chat excitedly about what they saw, give away tickets and CDs to the audience, etc. and even her detractors in theatre circles acknowledge that she is directly responsible for keeping several shows from closing and hundreds of pros working.
OK, so sometimes her taste is questionable–THE LION KING?! And those parodies get annoying (although she was just great as the Cat in the Hat in SUESSICAL, admittedly not a vocally demanding part). But I’ll be watching my tape tomorrow when I get back from work to see ‘Who’s That Woman?’ from FOLLIES, and so will millions of other young people, one of whom just might say to him or herself that it looks like something he or she might want to write, or compose, or sing, or dance in. And another creator or fan will be born.
<Hopping off the soapbox and carrying it away down Shubert Alley>
Oh, but there are many fine reasons for the Olson twerps to produce their new magazine. And I’m sure none of them involve money. :rolleyes:
I have to confess that I had no idea that Rosie O’Donnell was a lesbian – and when I read the article my first thought was “Those poor lesbians – this’ll set back gay rights something fierce.” Perhaps it’s just as well she’s not “out”…
Unless, of course, a fan who might have seen Bernadette Peters perform one of the most classic songs of entire genre tuned in and instead got that swinish lout’s anti-gun rant is turned off by her.
(For those who don’t know what I’m talking about, Bernadette Peters starred in a well-acclaimed revival of “Annie Get Your Gun”. She was scheduled to perform the famous (and showstopping) number "Anything You Can Do, I Can Do Better". Rosie, in her :rolleyes: infinite wisdom decided that this Irving Berlin masterpiece’s line about “I can shoot a partridge with a single cartridge” was A) pro-NRA and B) pro-Gun Violence and told Ms Peters to choose a different number to perform or rewrite the lyrics to suit Rosie. Ms Peters won an eternal place in my heart by telling Rosie to cram it (probably not in those words). But Bernadette Peters refused to switch and didn’t appear on the episode. Kudos to her!)
The problem with Rosie and Theatre is that in every one of the (admittedly) few times I’ve seen her, she’s oozed her politics into the discussion, tainting the discussion/enjoyment of the show. It’s possible to watch Oklahoma! and not worry about whether Jud’s death necessitates knife-control. You can enjoy Oliver! without having to turn it into a disucssion of sweatshops in Third World countries…unless you’re Rosie, and are trying to prove that you’re got “weighty” opinions.
In the long run, her deperate attempt to be Little Miss Theatre and trying to associate theatre with her own odious self, is doing far more harm than good, despite any short term gains she might achieve.