Closest I could get with an online translator is "come on- took!". The top words are definitely "come on", but maybe the other word is "taken" or "stolen"?
People often make up stories so they have an excuse to post something online, welcome to the internet. And the original poster on Imgur is the one who said he'd never noticed the NSFW image before, but that doesn't mean the rest of the firehouse weren't well aware of the hidden image.
I have no idea how such a thing would show up at all in this article, and I just double checked everything including all html and don't see anything related to porn links in the article. But if the problem persists please let me know Michael!
Also, are you advertising that martial arts school? Just wondering what that has to do with your comment.
I think the proof is in the videos, and since there are a bunch of real videos on YouTube of people cutting down trees with a katana that point really can't be argued.
The steel pipe in the second video isn't exactly a machine gun barrel, but it seems close enough to me to validate what I said in the article.
Above all, a trope is a convention. It can be a plot trick, a setup, a narrative structure, a character type, a linguistic idiom... you know it when you see it. Tropes are not inherently disruptive to a story; however, when the trope itself becomes intrusive, distracting the viewer rather than serving as shorthand, it has become a cliché.
Note that currently the Oxford English Dictionary actually recognizes the definition "a significant or recurrent theme; a motif", its earliest quotation for this meaning being from 1975. Merriam-Webster also somewhat recognizes this meaning, but twists it into "a common or overused theme or device: cliché", which seems unjustly condemning.
The next time you're looking for a place to talk trash and pick a fight via comment look somewhere else Travino, I really don't appreciate your snarky attitude.
Now that was a major oversight! James Bond is truly the original White Ninja, but I guess they didn't go digging that far back when they made their list.
I felt the same way PlaysWithWolves, Adventure was the secret level that started them all and they could have at least gave it props for being the first game with a secret level. But I think the article was aimed at those who were born well after the Atari console came out (Millennials) because their choices are pretty much all 90s and beyond.
I know but I figured people would understand I was speaking colloquially when I used "snuck" in conjunction with "stuff". And just so you know grammar nazis are wholeheartedly despised by those of us who write for the internet, but I'll give you a pass this time SparkS!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xhQsfyASjwM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RyO46RQhYkQ
Also, are you advertising that martial arts school? Just wondering what that has to do with your comment.
I think the proof is in the videos, and since there are a bunch of real videos on YouTube of people cutting down trees with a katana that point really can't be argued.
The steel pipe in the second video isn't exactly a machine gun barrel, but it seems close enough to me to validate what I said in the article.
Above all, a trope is a convention. It can be a plot trick, a setup, a narrative structure, a character type, a linguistic idiom... you know it when you see it. Tropes are not inherently disruptive to a story; however, when the trope itself becomes intrusive, distracting the viewer rather than serving as shorthand, it has become a cliché.
Note that currently the Oxford English Dictionary actually recognizes the definition "a significant or recurrent theme; a motif", its earliest quotation for this meaning being from 1975. Merriam-Webster also somewhat recognizes this meaning, but twists it into "a common or overused theme or device: cliché", which seems unjustly condemning.
The next time you're looking for a place to talk trash and pick a fight via comment look somewhere else Travino, I really don't appreciate your snarky attitude.