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Monika said:Give 2257 A Cheese To Keep Him Happy!
2257 and 2257's sister meet again. He becomes very hungry towards her, starts to hear his stomach growl, and mentions putting cheese on some spaghetti with homemade sauce when he gets home. 2257's sister notices this and walks up to him. They meet face to face.
2257's sister: "2257."
2257: "Yes, 2257's sister?," 2257 quietly asks as though awaiting a proclamation of metric cheese measurements from 2257's sister.
2257's sister: "There's no cheese available to buy from the store until Monday," 2257's sister quietly and gently informs 2257.
2257: "Oh. Okay," 2257 states in a normal, casual tone of voice.
2257 and 2257's sister then have a normal conversation as they walk into the sunset.
~The End~
Other Person's Response: I found that scene quite comical!
Monika said:Relating writing mediocre comedy to writing music is like saying a frog is similar to a bee because they both have legs.
MattMVS7 said:If I were to present this scene as a normal, polite, humble human being without sharing my packets to them (which brag about these tunes I hear in my mind and how the lives of others can't be beautiful without their positive emotions), then I bet these people would find this scene comical.
Roller said:Monika said:Relating writing mediocre comedy to writing music is like saying a frog is similar to a bee because they both have legs.
^^^ Comedy and music are not alike in the way you're thinking. Anyone can be funny--it's actually one of those things that humans do naturally, look for comedic windows. Music takes a whole lot of skill, way more than comedy does. As someone who dabbles in both (but doesn't consider themselves good in either), my experience is that comedy is much easier because it is significantly more subjective than music. Someone out there will find x joke funny, regardless of its quality; this is something so basic that the Sims doesn't require you to have some sort of "comedy skill" to make a joke in a conversation. Music, however, takes a great deal of learning and dedication. They cannot be compared in any sense.
I also don't know why you claim you're a "natural comedian". All of your jokes in this thread have been very dry and simply examples of irony, not humor on par with a career comedian.
MattMVS7 said:If I were to present this scene as a normal, polite, humble human being without sharing my packets to them (which brag about these tunes I hear in my mind and how the lives of others can't be beautiful without their positive emotions), then I bet these people would find this scene comical.
Then why don't you try that instead of making huge narcissistic posts about music in a Mario community? Any serious and legitimate criticism or help someone tries to give you, you brush off. This is why people aren't taking you seriously anymore. You ask for help, but you don't accept it, and use "standards" as your reasoning. People have different standards. You can pick and choose the criticism you receive, but you will never get someone whose standards are on your level.
Music always sounds good in your head. It takes skill to flesh it out on paper, skill that you can only learn from others.
Roller said:That's incredibly flawed logic that doesn't address anything that I said in my post. Popular does not de facto mean great.
Roller said:The issue with that is that you're basing "high standards" off of your own standards, and proceeding to place yourself beside celebrated artists/comedians. If you label your standards as "moderate standards", then anyone with actually fair standards who tries to help you or give you criticism, you'll brush aside.
And what is wrong with people with high standards critiquing your work anyway? Regardless of standards, criticisms only serve to make you a better musician or comic. Don't you want to make your works good to people of all standards? Or do you just want people to praise you no matter what? If you want the latter, I suggest presenting your works to close friends who will go along with everything you do, and not the broad Internet, which holds a huge variety of people, personalities, and "standards".
Roller said:That doesn't justify disregarding valid criticism just because you don't receive praise as well, my dude
Agreed. I've taken criticism when it comes to my art, which allows me to get better with it.Roller said:That's an opinion that you're entitled to. Don't consider it factual, though.
Roller said:That's an opinion that you're entitled to. Don't consider it factual, though.
Lucario said:You only give praise when you can really find anything good about something. You don't just praise whatever you see to make the creator happy. You praise something to let the creator know of what's positive in a certain art piece, and let them know keep in and what to improve or leave out.
Always expect feedback, but don't expect people to just shower with praise or either bombard it with criticism. You can only know about people's opinions once they have provided feedback. Before said feedback is provided, you have the right to judge your own works of art however you want, however you can't impose your opinion on everyone else. You just might like different things people here do, and that's ok honestly, as long as you don't complain about our standards by saying they're "too high". They are different, but not necessarily high.
I don't know how to talk anymore, I shouldn't keep talking to no avail.
Roller said:Well, unfortunately, that renders basically your whole post moot because no one is going to have the exact same standards you have that you consider "moderate standards", as that's really subjective. You might as well have not shared at all if this is the basis for all your responses to people's posts.
Princess Mario said:Roller, we've went through similar "serious talk" with this guy before. I suggest you don't waste your breath on him, but you can make an example out of MattMVS7 of what NOT to do. I suggest you also take the "meme" route too and try not to waste too much time on him unless you have a really good joke or something.