Still sped up and lots of missing frames. Remember that a lot happens between frames of a stop motion movie that we don't see, yet it looks smooth as silk on release. Show me an unedited, regular speed video with her pulling this off and I'll believe it. Too much room for shenanigans with what she's posted.
One thing many these ambidextrous artists have in common is they never show you the full length video of their projects. Especially with this one, I highly suspect this is simply a stop motion video where most of the drawing is happening between the frames.
to say the least, its extremely low iq and reckless to subject a newborn baby to ocean water
"Recent cases of flesh-eating bacterial infections have made headlines, yet you’re far more likely to wind up with nausea, diarrhea, or a respiratory infection after a trip to the beach. Researchers estimate bacteria in the waterways cause more than 90 million cases of stomach, respiratory, ear, eye, and skin-related illnesses every year in the U.S., while fewer than 1,500 cases of necrotizing fasciitis (aka flesh-eating bacteria) happen here annually, from any cause.
“Fecal matter, like from sewage discharge, is responsible for a lot of the pollution,” says Mark Mattson, president of Swim Drink Fish, an organization that promotes safe water. “After it rains, urban beaches are often contaminated from the runoff. And in rural areas, it’s agricultural pollution.”
Maybe a tax dodge. Rental income from the house or capital gain from its resale will be taxed at her no-other-income bracket rather that at dad's presumably higher one.
This product is so over-processed that it's actually far worse for you than just eating a hamburger. There's 430mg of sodium in "impossible" meat. There's 67.2mg of sodium in hamburger meat. 220 calories per patty, vs 197 per real meat. And 10 grams of saturated fat in the fake stuff vs 4.5 in real hamburger. This stuff is disgusting.
Never ceases to amaze me why vegetarians & vegans would want their meat substitutes to look like the 'real thing'. And seem to be prepared to pay at least twice the price of the real thing for the privilege.
I don't wish to belittle the subject or these well-meaning people. But they are about as much use for the environment as all those 'celebrities' who went off to the Google jolly in the Mediterranean in 140 private jets and dozens of mega yachts to talk climate change last month. Or St. Greta of Thunberg with her publicity stunt trip across The Atlantic to do the same. Obviously she can’t use a plane, because she’ll be called a hypocrite. And she’s done just that, by making the trip on a 60-foot racing yacht. Naturally, this has made all her disciples very happy, but what’s the message? That the half a million people who fly every day from Europe to America should use a £15m yacht instead? And take four weeks to do it? It gets worse, because if you examine the yacht she’s using, it’s not as green as you might imagine. First of all, it is equipped with a diesel engine. And second, it’s made mostly from carbon fibre, which cannot be recycled effectively, and which uses 14 times more energy to produce than steel. Which can be recycled very easily indeed. What St. G of T is doing, then, is precisely the opposite of what she is setting out to achieve. And so, I fear are those who think emotional energy can power the world.
I'm not sure about the above etymology goes far enough to explain that it was used in the West to describe easterners on vacations in the West and became a part of Western American English a derogatory term. Now the bigger question was when did it transform to be less of an insult and more of a positive moniker or a gender neutral way to refer to a person? (I know quite a few Californians who will refer to anyone by the term dude or mixed group of people as dudes so it is not just a masculine term) https://www.etymonline.com/search?q=dude&source=ds_search
Lead lined coffins have been a thing for centuries, if not millennia. There is a chance that the outer shell rotted away and only the lining is left.