Editing Talk:2112: Night Shift

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::Text in question: "This is probably a play on {{w|white supremacy}}, {{w|angry white male}}, or similar areas where violent expression of ones views and abuse of the views of others are prevalent."  [[Special:Contributions/162.158.106.6|162.158.106.6]] 01:49, 26 February 2019 (UTC)
 
::Text in question: "This is probably a play on {{w|white supremacy}}, {{w|angry white male}}, or similar areas where violent expression of ones views and abuse of the views of others are prevalent."  [[Special:Contributions/162.158.106.6|162.158.106.6]] 01:49, 26 February 2019 (UTC)
 
:::While it isn’t unlink Randall to get political, there is nothing close in here about that specifically. It seems more to be a surreal and fun joke comment. This especially doesn’t make sense with the comic itself, which is about how a “night” mode turns down the intensity of opinions. The title text, to me, is Randall “turning the brightness up” like in the day, vastly increasing the intensity of the opinions. Kinda like how when you turn up the brightness too fast it can hurt your eyes, or how night mode can lull one into sleep. [[User:Netherin5|Netherin5]] ([[User talk:Netherin5|talk]]) 17:17, 26 February 2019 (UTC)
 
:::While it isn’t unlink Randall to get political, there is nothing close in here about that specifically. It seems more to be a surreal and fun joke comment. This especially doesn’t make sense with the comic itself, which is about how a “night” mode turns down the intensity of opinions. The title text, to me, is Randall “turning the brightness up” like in the day, vastly increasing the intensity of the opinions. Kinda like how when you turn up the brightness too fast it can hurt your eyes, or how night mode can lull one into sleep. [[User:Netherin5|Netherin5]] ([[User talk:Netherin5|talk]]) 17:17, 26 February 2019 (UTC)
::::What suggest this is that the intensified reactions come when adjusting the "White balance" in the title text.  Angry white male things are particularly common in the US at the time this cartoon was written, with President Trump, etc.  So there is something very specifically about it here.  (Link is uses the term white, and Angry white male discourse is characterized by not being particularly balanced, that is not considering various facets of an issue).  [[Special:Contributions/162.158.107.149|162.158.107.149]] 06:12, 15 September 2019 (UTC)
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::::What suggest this is that the intensified reactions come when adjusting the "White balance" in the title text.  Angry white male things are particularly common in the US at the time this cartoon was written, with President Trump, etc.  So there is something very specifically about it here.  [[Special:Contributions/162.158.107.149|162.158.107.149]] 06:12, 15 September 2019 (UTC)  
::::White balance is not the same thing as brightness (in a technical sense - white balance changes relative amounts of colors, not the white point or black point), so that interpretation doesn't make as much sense from a technical standpoint.  (If they meant brightness, they would have said brightness.)  It also doesn't make much of a joke (doesn't have the double-entendre).  However, you could add that as an alternative interpretation to the text.  [[Special:Contributions/162.158.107.149|162.158.107.149]] 06:26, 15 September 2019 (UTC)
 
  
 
The value of brevity and directness is very much a cultural one.  Women in American culture are discouraged from giving direct answers. Similarly, in Japanese culture, indirectness is more polite, e.g.  [https://leo.stcloudstate.edu/kaleidoscope/volume3/direct.html American Directness and the Japanese]  So the observation, which was in the explanation, that "In short, on the internet, we probably talk too much and don't cut to the chase enough."  Probably originated from somebody coming from a culture that values directness (e.g. an American male.)  [[Special:Contributions/162.158.106.6|162.158.106.6]] 23:55, 17 February 2019 (UTC)
 
The value of brevity and directness is very much a cultural one.  Women in American culture are discouraged from giving direct answers. Similarly, in Japanese culture, indirectness is more polite, e.g.  [https://leo.stcloudstate.edu/kaleidoscope/volume3/direct.html American Directness and the Japanese]  So the observation, which was in the explanation, that "In short, on the internet, we probably talk too much and don't cut to the chase enough."  Probably originated from somebody coming from a culture that values directness (e.g. an American male.)  [[Special:Contributions/162.158.106.6|162.158.106.6]] 23:55, 17 February 2019 (UTC)

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