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TomFulp
Hi there! In case you didn't know, I created newgrounds. No, it wasn't made by some giant company - just some dumb kid who now has help. I also co-founded the Behemoth; we made Alien Hominid and Castle Crashers. Icon by Pegosho, banner by OmenaKettu.

Age 47, Male

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Glenside, PA

Joined on 12/15/99

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Thoughts on the World

Posted by TomFulp - 3 days ago


When I need to unwind, my emotional support videos are sometimes these road trip videos where people drive around small towns and tell you about them.



I watched this video about West Virginia because I was curious to see the $30k houses and was surprised by how charming the towns felt, surrounded by mountains and rivers. I’m probably romanticizing these towns but it made me picture an alternate life where I gathered up a bunch of friends who also made a living on-line and we bought up a town in a place like this.


Then I stumbled on this video about an artists’ loft in Brooklyn:



This is another romantic vision of a bunch of artists occupying an old factory, turning it into a magical place full of wonder. If you’re a fan of dark comedy, watch all the way through until the epilogue at 19:14.


Lots of artists would love the idea of living in an NYC loft but you’d need to have some sort of trust fund to do that nowadays. There was a time though when these neighborhoods were run down, abandoned and cheap. It makes me wonder if any of these abandoned towns will become the next hot artists’ enclave, where people will wish they had moved there once it gets too expensive to buy anything.


Another video I enjoyed recently was this one about Shankweiler's Drive-In Theatre, an hour away from me although I’ve never been there (yet).



I was kinda struck that a common comment from customers is, “oh, I thought you were the owners. I didn’t realize you actually, like, did things.” It made me think about how so many of us have gotten far removed from the idea of the business owner being someone who works there. It made me think about this episode of The Sopranos when they tried to extort a Starbucks.



Somewhat related, I’ve watched and read a lot of stuff about Private Equity over the years and I’m not sure which was the best but this past week Stuff You Should Know had a decent podcast on the topic, “Private Equity: Your Ears Will Bleed.”



One example of the vampiric nature of private equity was the purchase of Red Lobster. Red Lobster owned all of its properties and was paying $16 million per year in property taxes. The new investors sold all the properties and split up the windfall amongst themselves, after which Red Lobster was now on the hook for $158 million per year in rent. It doesn't matter to these investors because once all the assets have been sold and the loans have been maxed out, they let it all go bankrupt and walk away with the money they collected along the way. Even the initial purchase of the company itself is a loan, a "leveraged buyout."


Another good podcast I listened to this week was the Search Engine episode titled “A Dubai Chocolate theory of the internet.”


This episode talks about things like Dubai Chocolate and Labubu, which have also been on my mind this year. Something I found compelling is the case that YouTube was founded on the idea that “people will make culture we can use to sell ads”, while TikTok was founded on “the culture will be people making ads.” 


I also liked the idea that “everything is porn” now, as in everything is raw stimuli, even if it’s not sexual. For example the video that made Dubai Chocolate viral is “porn.”


iu_1450408_1.jpg


The case is also made that TikTok isn’t a video platform made to compete with platforms like YouTube and Instagram, it’s a shopping platform made to compete with Amazon, something that is more clear to people who understand how apps integrate commerce in China. The user videos are there to drive attention to TikTok shop, essentially.


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Comments

Thank you for sharing your thoughts, wit, and wisdom!

I’d love to live in a house and just make things with other people. It would at least keep me mentally sane and have something to look forward to each day.

Thx Tom, just like taking a calming cruise, exploring some random new place, to ease dat mind, butt, without having to go anywhere.
Will check out that bootifull 'murican scenery in a lil' bit! After I get back from checking out some random dutch B.U.Tfull scenery, with own eyes.
':)

Some of these issues are why I’m so glad to have Newgrounds, a human-scale community uncorrupted by profit interests. And it’s a reliable place to meet people who haven’t been too affected by social media.

Does... does that chocolate bar have guacamole coming out of it? WTF

It's grounded up pistachios and other stuff.

Very interesting thoughts and times we live in, thank you for sharing this was a great read.

A very wholesome Tom Fulp post :D it’s nice to read into the lives of others.

@TomFulp
That's a little more reasonable. I wonder if my patent pending guacamole bar will take off...

Thanks for sharing. This was a cool read and the videos were interesting.

Funny thing, I was actually, last couple of weeks, mopingly depressed, doing stuff like watching those videos, butt, in real life.
While I was figuring out, how I could use a legal loophole, to make cheap little random daytrips with the train (€2,80 for 6 hours of random train traveling, cheaper than buying a small cup of coffee, just to have a seat at a starbucks! With a view outside that moves as well).
And then also lookin around at dem charming looking old houses and landscapes while escaping the city (insert that one Sonic soundtrack here).

I love hopping on Google Earth and just randomly finding small towns then googling/youtubing them to find interesting stuff

One time I found a random small town in Arco, Idaho and it turns out it was the first ever town in the US to be ran by nuclear power

Interesting posts Tom!

I watched the entirety of the second video you posted. The thought of livin among a bunch of artists as a small community, helpin each other out and all is like a dream.

dude that statement from Tim as he's workin on his project is pretty powerful too. "Its a waste of time but it may have potential." felt that in a personal level.

not to be an emotional goober but it made me teary eyed.

I must say that is an interesting news

Do you watch chocolate porn?

Looks like same stuff I usually watch, thanks for sharing hehe

Interesting read, Tom.

The world is doomed and we are just here to witness the downfall.

Popular culture is now advertising-driven.
All our references and works are extremely cynical and self-conscious. Art for many is now synonymous with mere entertainment, and artists (or rather, technicians) are content to simply reproduce the form of things.

They are no longer guided by emotion and sincerity, but rather by the assembly of ideas and forms they appreciate, ideas that themselves come from the past, inevitably leading to the creation of pure entertainment devoid of meaning or emotion. I think that if we continue like this, we will continue to flood minds and culture with things like labubu, Dubai chocolate, Italian brainrot—empty culture that doesn't properly nourish people's imaginations. Artists will become increasingly rare and even more isolated and poor if it continues like this.

I really like the idea in your post of a small community of artists working together in one place to bring out the best of what they know how.

If you look at the greatest artistic movements, they always started like that. A small network/tribe of passionate and ambitious people with the idea of ​​doing something new. Whether it's the beginnings of modern art, the Surrealist movement, New Hollywood, the French New Wave,
The beginnings of game design theory in Kyoto, or even here on Newgrounds with the birth of many independent video games and animations and a culture of its own which still today influences the minds of many artists and all popular culture.

There's always a network of new artists who help each other, share their work and knowledge, and end up making an impression with their own culture.
A small, ambitious artistic community. There are fewer and fewer places like this, and fewer people who understand that they need others and a network to improve, even on the internet. I believe Newgrounds has the potential to be that kind of space in the future for great minds, because it already has been.

Sorry for my bad english, thanks for reading me !!

It's wonderful seeing people find ways to live and thrive in what's now a bleak moment in history

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