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anyone else get a feeling like that was Kentucky meets Bollywood with that silly dancing stuff?
oh yeah she's cute as heck. |
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you might very well be disappointed, She's a Temple going Mormon. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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In my next life, I want to come back as one of her thongs.... you might very well be disappointed, She's a Temple going Mormon. Ok, I am willing to come back as her magic underwear too... |
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Saw her here in Las Vegas about a month ago. She was amazing!
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The girl's got charisma, that's for sure.
Her moves are, I dunno, a little herky jerky. But it's probably difficult to get the body to flow smoothly when the bow has abrupt movements. Think: moving with the instrument. Still sexy, though. I like her music, but can do without the videos. |
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I feel like I just watched some dancing with the stars bullshit.
The women were above average, but I would have preferred they wear less. I'll give it a C+ because it looked like they tried hard. |
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Not that I'm complaining, mind you, but isn't that more old timey wild west than steampunk?
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She is cute and can play...
But all her music sounds exactly the same. |
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Lindsey Stirling Steampunk... http://i1273.photobucket.com/albums/y404/fvlminata/bunkgif_zps80eaed47.gif View Quote I cant believe it took to the second page for this..... Slack-jawed faggots........... ARF, I am Dissapoint Just for shits and Giggles.....ill drop this here |
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I saw ( several weeks ago) a dozen or so steam punk firearms scattered about and mixed in with the normal displays in the Springfield Armory museam.
There was one little sign saying it was some sort of special project but most of the silly tourists were looking at them and thinking they were real firearms. All pretty strange |
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One of my favorite tracks from her "Shatter Me" album, its on my Lindsey Stirling playlist.
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I like my Lindsey Stirling videos the way I like my porn... .... without a bunch of extraneous, contrived plot!!! |
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The girl's got charisma, that's for sure. Her moves are, I dunno, a little herky jerky. But it's probably difficult to get the body to flow smoothly when the bow has abrupt movements. Think: moving with the instrument. Still sexy, though. I like her music, but can do without the videos. Perhaps this is more your speed then.... 3:00 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sf6LD2B_kDQ I already own that album. |
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Victorian era styles (on the women), goggles, the brass bell added to the violin, Victorian era setting (Wild West correlated with Victorian period)...definitely steampunk-ish. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Not that I'm complaining, mind you, but isn't that more old timey wild west than steampunk? Victorian era styles (on the women), goggles, the brass bell added to the violin, Victorian era setting (Wild West correlated with Victorian period)...definitely steampunk-ish. The steam appears in my pants while watching the video. So yes, it's steampunk. |
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More or less is steam punk. Steam punk rejection of the old west genre is silly. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Yeah, not steam punk. Still, angry god, drum set, screen door. More or less is steam punk. Steam punk rejection of the old west genre is silly. Not you again. Screw it, set is supposed to look 100 years old. So steam punk. ETA: You are now my mortal enemy Shane. Maybe I'm more attached to "steampunk" then I thought. Are Chinese Junks from the 1860's steampunk too? Because that is the same time period. |
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Not you again. Screw it, set is supposed to look 100 years old. So steam punk. ETA: You are now my mortal enemy Shane. Maybe I'm more attached to "steampunk" then I thought. Are Chinese Junks from the 1860's steampunk too? Because that is the same time period. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Yeah, not steam punk. Still, angry god, drum set, screen door. More or less is steam punk. Steam punk rejection of the old west genre is silly. Not you again. Screw it, set is supposed to look 100 years old. So steam punk. ETA: You are now my mortal enemy Shane. Maybe I'm more attached to "steampunk" then I thought. Are Chinese Junks from the 1860's steampunk too? Because that is the same time period. I won't be your mortal enemy for long. I'm just too darn nice if given half a chance. Not sure that Chinese Junks qualify. Perhaps you could give me more specific examples or arguments of why they would or wouldn't. In this particular video it goes beyond the era, though that is one piece of the puzzle/genre. As I pointed out, it includes the influence of Victorian style, goggles, the addition of brass workings on both the violin and as clothing accessories, and the implantation of before-its-time technology though it may not exactly be clockwork. There's the whole counter-culture vibe with the robber characters, gals in scandalously short skirts (for the era), and independently capable women thing. So other than not showing the tech as definitively clockwork type, please explain how it isn't steampunk? As far as I can see, with one possible deviation, the main parts are all there. |
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The steam appears in my pants while watching the video. So yes, it's steampunk. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Not that I'm complaining, mind you, but isn't that more old timey wild west than steampunk? Victorian era styles (on the women), goggles, the brass bell added to the violin, Victorian era setting (Wild West correlated with Victorian period)...definitely steampunk-ish. The steam appears in my pants while watching the video. So yes, it's steampunk. <Snort> |
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you might very well be disappointed, She's a Temple going Mormon. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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In my next life, I want to come back as one of her thongs.... you might very well be disappointed, She's a Temple going Mormon. It's her only defect. Her panties are literally made of unobtainium. |
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I won't be your mortal enemy for long. I'm just too darn nice if given half a chance. Not sure that Chinese Junks qualify. Perhaps you could give me more specific examples or arguments of why they would or wouldn't. In this particular video it goes beyond the era, though that is one piece of the puzzle/genre. As I pointed out, it includes the influence of Victorian style, goggles, the addition of brass workings on both the violin and as clothing accessories, and the implantation of before-its-time technology though it may not exactly be clockwork. There's the whole counter-culture vibe with the robber characters, gals in scandalously short skirts (for the era), and independently capable women thing. So other than not showing the tech as definitively clockwork type, please explain how it isn't steampunk? As far as I can see, with one possible deviation, the main parts are all there. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Yeah, not steam punk. Still, angry god, drum set, screen door. More or less is steam punk. Steam punk rejection of the old west genre is silly. Not you again. Screw it, set is supposed to look 100 years old. So steam punk. ETA: You are now my mortal enemy Shane. Maybe I'm more attached to "steampunk" then I thought. Are Chinese Junks from the 1860's steampunk too? Because that is the same time period. I won't be your mortal enemy for long. I'm just too darn nice if given half a chance. Not sure that Chinese Junks qualify. Perhaps you could give me more specific examples or arguments of why they would or wouldn't. In this particular video it goes beyond the era, though that is one piece of the puzzle/genre. As I pointed out, it includes the influence of Victorian style, goggles, the addition of brass workings on both the violin and as clothing accessories, and the implantation of before-its-time technology though it may not exactly be clockwork. There's the whole counter-culture vibe with the robber characters, gals in scandalously short skirts (for the era), and independently capable women thing. So other than not showing the tech as definitively clockwork type, please explain how it isn't steampunk? As far as I can see, with one possible deviation, the main parts are all there. The reason I mentioned Chinese junks was as cheap jab at your "Time period" remark, that is all. Not as solid refutation of your point. It really is a distinction without a difference. However, I think the main distinction is a "Frontier" setting vs a more "City" centric setting. Like I said in the other thread about Wild Wild West, Steam-punk has generally oppressive, dystopian atmosphere. Dancing cowboys is "zany" and far too happy. And Steam-punk tries to take itself way too seriously at times. |
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Victorian era styles (on the women), goggles, the brass bell added to the violin, Victorian era setting (Wild West correlated with Victorian period)...definitely steampunk-ish. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Not that I'm complaining, mind you, but isn't that more old timey wild west than steampunk? Victorian era styles (on the women), goggles, the brass bell added to the violin, Victorian era setting (Wild West correlated with Victorian period)...definitely steampunk-ish. Well, that and the sonic weapons everyone was using... |
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The reason I mentioned Chinese junks was as cheap jab at your "Time period" remark, that is all. Not as solid refutation of your point. It really is a distinction without a difference. However, I think the main distinction is a "Frontier" setting vs a more "City" centric setting. Like I said in the other thread about Wild Wild West, Steam-punk has generally oppressive, dystopian atmosphere. Dancing cowboys is "zany" and far too happy. And Steam-punk tries to take itself way too seriously at times. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Yeah, not steam punk. Still, angry god, drum set, screen door. More or less is steam punk. Steam punk rejection of the old west genre is silly. Not you again. Screw it, set is supposed to look 100 years old. So steam punk. ETA: You are now my mortal enemy Shane. Maybe I'm more attached to "steampunk" then I thought. Are Chinese Junks from the 1860's steampunk too? Because that is the same time period. I won't be your mortal enemy for long. I'm just too darn nice if given half a chance. Not sure that Chinese Junks qualify. Perhaps you could give me more specific examples or arguments of why they would or wouldn't. In this particular video it goes beyond the era, though that is one piece of the puzzle/genre. As I pointed out, it includes the influence of Victorian style, goggles, the addition of brass workings on both the violin and as clothing accessories, and the implantation of before-its-time technology though it may not exactly be clockwork. There's the whole counter-culture vibe with the robber characters, gals in scandalously short skirts (for the era), and independently capable women thing. So other than not showing the tech as definitively clockwork type, please explain how it isn't steampunk? As far as I can see, with one possible deviation, the main parts are all there. The reason I mentioned Chinese junks was as cheap jab at your "Time period" remark, that is all. Not as solid refutation of your point. It really is a distinction without a difference. However, I think the main distinction is a "Frontier" setting vs a more "City" centric setting. Like I said in the other thread about Wild Wild West, Steam-punk has generally oppressive, dystopian atmosphere. Dancing cowboys is "zany" and far too happy. And Steam-punk tries to take itself way too seriously at times. Perhaps the Wild West aspect would be classified as a subgenre within the larger Steampunk genre. As for the dancing cowboys, I'd rather just forget that they ever existed. |
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Mmhh, very nice!
Kato Steampunk girl gives me a hard-on too... |
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She is all I really listen to any more besides talk radio.
Hell I even listen to her at the gym. |
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As the Father of a teenage daughter I LOVE steampunk! Why? Because the outfits my daughter wears to the cons are hand made, cover her body completely, and have about 87 different snaps and buckles - so taking them off requires some real effort. Hell, I even got her a genuine pith helmet - and the lenses in her aviator goggles are made out of heavy duty polycarbonate. To her they are merely a fashion accessory, but to me they give her head and eyes real impact protection. Protection from what? I have no idea. The important thing is that I feel better about it I'd much rather see her in a Jules Verne inspired pirate costume than a Slave Leia costume. |
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There is a branch of steam-punk that deals with the wild west. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Not that I'm complaining, mind you, but isn't that more old timey wild west than steampunk? There is a branch of steam-punk that deals with the wild west. Ahh, did not know that Posted Via AR15.Com Mobile |
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If I were retarded, and grew up on a farm, that might impress me. But I didn't, so it doesn't.
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