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Every police department should have to hear our rage via Zoom call

2023-04-02 10:24:55 author:dointy.com
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Every police department should have to hear our rage via Zoom call

Yesterday, the Los Angeles Police Commission held a Zoom call with citizens — of Los Angeles and the surrounding areas, as well as some former residents — and watched with blank faces as citizens berated them mercilessly for eight hours.

Every police department should have to hear our rage via Zoom call(图1)

The call came not only after several nights of protests in Los Angeles, but also after LAPD chief Michael Moore blamed the death of George Floyd(Opens in a new tab) on the city's protestors and looters. (Moore walked back on the comments(Opens in a new tab) after backlash.)

But that's just the tip of the iceberg: LAPD has a long history of violence against black people — next year will be 30 years since LA officers beat Rodney King(Opens in a new tab).

After many people were initially left out of the call(Opens in a new tab) because it capped at 500 people — and after the boomers on the commission figured out how to work Zoom — the commission said their statements.

Then, the real show started. The public unleashed their fury on the LAPD for hours on end. They demanded Moore's resignation or firing, as well as to defund the LAPD and support the people's budget(Opens in a new tab). Some spewed incredible insults(Opens in a new tab), while others broke down in tears. Several impassioned callers, like this one, went viral:

After watching this call, I'm convinced that every police department needs to have a Zoom call like this one.

While the LAPD is notorious for its racism, so are many other departments across the country — including the Minneapolis police(Opens in a new tab), who are responsible for the killing of George Floyd. He died after three police officers pinned him down, one kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes.

Police departments across the nation should be subjected to people's rage. In many cities, they're beating up peaceful protestors who they are sworn to protect, all while we — the taxpayers — pay their salaries. Police commissions are supposed to be working for us, the civilians, and we should be able to scream and cry and drag our cops just like the residents of LA did yesterday. (And then I think we should defund the police(Opens in a new tab), but that's a different story.)

Public meetings with police departments aren't new. As some activists mentioned on the call, they've been raising the same concerns about the police for years. But now thanks to technology not afforded previous generations, these meetings can be online (and the current pandemic pretty much mandates that, anyway). Virtual meetings can not only be more accessible to people who can't make them in-person, but allows these meetings to go viral and be seen by thousands, both in the department's jurisdiction and beyond.

The total impact of the LAPD call has yet to be seen. Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti didn't make any promises about changing the budget(Opens in a new tab), and as of publication the LAPD chief has not resigned.

But that doesn't mean this call didn't have an impact. Hundreds of people were able to express anger that has possibly been pent up for years. People around the country — like me, in New York — stayed tuned for hours and are now inspired to tell our police departments our similar demands (and probably insults). Like protesting, donating money, and calling our reps, being able to rip into our respective police departments can be just another action to elicit change, and it's a cathartic one at that.

Police commissions and departments have a duty to their citizens to let their voices be heard. We are all owed a more modern-day public forum. Americans everywhere should be able to call out their police chief's racist eyebrows.

Mashable has reached out to LAPD for comment and will update if received.

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    I called my mom to break the news, but much like the mom detailed in The Guardian piece she was in denial and tried to reassure me that I have a wonderful imagination. "You're telling me you can't picture Barack Obama’s face?" she asked in a baffled tone. "I can’t even picture your face!" I sobbed.

    My mind kicked into overdrive and hastily cycled through a series of concerns: Does a lack of visual imagination mean I’m not creative? How did I major in creative writing? Is this why I sucked at penning concrete details in poetry class? Should I even be a writer? Does this explain my struggle to focus when reading fiction? Is Lorde's "Supercut" about a *literal* supercut in her head? Can people just direct personal short films and watch their wildest fantasies play out whenever they damn well please?

    That last thought hit me the hardest. As someone who worships television and cinema to a borderline unhealthy extent, the realization that I was essentially missing a screen in my mind that contained endless possibilities — a place where I could project and replay scenes from my own life, envision an endless string of future scenarios, and visually conceptualize my most ambitious and outlandish ideas — was soul crushing.

    How to tell if you have aphantasia

    If my experience sounds at all like your own, you may be aphantasic, too. Welcome to the unique, albeit slightly stressful, club.

    Since individual visualization can be difficult to describe, a tool I find helpful when explaining aphantasia is the below image of a person picturing an apple. I'm a hard five on this scale, but my friend who identifies as a one claims he can not only picture the apple on a black background, but he can rotate the piece of fruit, change the background to whatever his heart desires, and perform an endless slew of other impressive mental feats.

    You can try to imagine an apple as a test, but Zeman suggests picturing a few different things before assessing your capabilities.

    "Think of a scene: the sun setting over the mountains in a misty sky. Think of your breakfast table, or your mum. Once you've run through a few possibilities, if somebody says they see nothing at all you've got the beginnings of evidence that they're aphantasic," he explained. As part of Zeman's aphantasia-centered research with the University of Exeter, his The Eye's Mind study(Opens in a new tab) also includes an online survey(Opens in a new tab) you can take to help further assess your visual imagery.

    It's crucial to note that aphantasia isn't a singular experience. A group of people who lack visual imaginations may also struggle with prosopagnosia (the inability to recognize familiar faces). And though ordinary memory in those with aphantasia is fine, about one-third of aphantasic people have poor autobiographical memory, give less rich descriptions when recalling past events, and have trouble imagining future events. For some, it can affect the ability to imagine sensations associated with touch, smell, or sound, too.

    "There's a question about whether that lack extends to other senses, and that seems to vary between people with aphantasia. Some people say they have no mind's ear or that they can't imagine the touch of velvet. Whereas other people say that it's just a visual limitation. They have quite vivid imagery in other senses," Zeman explained. "But for most people with aphantasia it's across the board. It affects imagery generally."

    "There's a question about whether that lack extends to other senses, and that seems to vary between people with aphantasia."

    Though aphantasic people can't voluntarily conjure mental images, some, including myself, are able to see pictures in their mind when they’re sleeping, because images associated with dreaming are called upon or unlocked involuntarily.

    "There's a group of people, maybe about 30 percent, who say they don't [dream]. So it's not everyone, but certainly many do. That's really a quite interesting dissociation, isn't it? The differentiation between wakeful and dreaming imagery," Zeman noted.

    There's also speculation(Opens in a new tab) that hallucinogenic drugs may allow folks with aphantasia to freely see imagery. But the research is scant, and taking a trip to free your mind may be illegal where you live. Even if you never can trick your mind into seeing what others see naturally, know that at least you're not alone.

    Why isn't aphantasia more well known?

    Everyone I've come across who has aphantasia came to the realization by reading an article, seeing a social media post, or chatting with someone about the mind's eye. My editor, for instance, had no idea she was aphantasic until I pitched this piece. And if I hadn't stumbled across that article in 2018 I might still be under the impression that my visual imagination is perfectly normal.

    An estimated two to three percent of people have aphantasia, but because it's still not a recognizable, everyday term it's possible that people can go their whole lives without even learning it exists. So why isn't a lack of visual imagination more well-known in 2021?

    Zeman started researching aphantasia in the 2000s after a 65-year-old man who lost the ability to mentally picture things after undergoing a medical procedure sought him out(Opens in a new tab). Prior to hearing the man's story, Zeman had never encountered this particular symptom before, and though he isn’t aphantasic himself (he describes his visualizations as "very average") he was intrigued by the new neurological phenomenon.

    SEE ALSO: How 'neurosculpting' can train your brain

    Upon researching blindness of the mind's eye, Zeman discovered so little information on the subject that he dubbed the lack of attention a "historical oddity." In 1880, Francis Galton, an anthropologist and eugenicist, touched on the topic after asking 100 men to recall the lighting, definition, coloring, and details of their breakfast tables. Galton, who was a relative of Charles Darwin, found 12 of the men lacked positive visualization and he reported their struggle to conjure mental images. In 2009, American psychologist and professor Bill Faw also wrote about a lack of visual imagination(Opens in a new tab) after administering a questionnaire to 2,500 people and determining that about two percent of people surveyed struggled to conjure mental imagery. But until Zeman really invested in research, the neurological phenomenon largely remained a mystery.

    "I think the trick was to produce a name. That's very useful. It kind of allows people to identify what's unusual about them," Zeman explained. Another reason he feels aphantasia is so difficult to discover is because "we all take our own experience to be the standard."

    "Until you have some moment of realization, we assume that everyone else is similar to us. And that reflects the fact that that visualization is a very private experience. It's something in your head, not something that other people can inspect and kind of check against the norm," Zeman explained. "And it’s quite easy to assume the language people are using to describe imagery is metaphorical… So it's easy to persuade yourself that that's the case."

    Don't let aphantasia get you down

    If you've made it this far and are now wrapped up in the same mind-blowing emotional spiral I experienced, trust me, I get it. But Zeman has some words of encouragement.

    Since 2015 when he and his team published a study on aphantasia(Opens in a new tab) based off questionnaires taken by 21 people, he estimates around 15,000 people have reached out to discuss the neurological phenomenon — either because they’re interested or have aphantasia themselves.

    Aphantasia can occasionally be a symptom of something that's happened to the brain, but it shouldn't be regarded as a medical condition or disorder, rather "a variant of normal human experience(Opens in a new tab)." Though you may encounter some mental imagery-related FOMO, having aphantasia isn't necessarily a bad thing.

    "There are many ways of imagining which don't require visualization. So I think you can be perfectly imaginative and aphantasic."

    "Although [aphantasia] makes a big difference to the inner experience, it doesn't make much difference to performance. People with aphantasia get along fine… even possibly, in some ways, they get along better than the rest," Zeman said, listing high-achievement individuals who have aphantasia, including Craig Venter(Opens in a new tab), the geneticist who decoded the genome; Ed Catmull(Opens in a new tab), co-founder of Pixar and president of Walt Disney Animation Studios; Blake Ross(Opens in a new tab), co-creator of the Mozilla Firefox; and neurologist Oliver Sacks. (Opens in a new tab)

    "There are many ways of imagining which don't require visualization. So I think you can be perfectly imaginative and aphantasic," he said. "It's just one piece of the big jigsaw. We're complicated beings."

    Zeman, who's also consultant for The Aphantasia Network(Opens in a new tab), a resource for people to learn more about aphantasia and connect with others who have it, plans to continue his research and data collection on the mind’s eye. He encourages people to get in touch(Opens in a new tab) with questions or to partake in studies.

    Read more from I learned it on the internet

    • TikTok's algorithms knew I was bi before I did. I'm not the only one.

    • Watching makeup tutorials made me feel confident wearing less makeup

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  • This Hermione dance is actual magic

    (图1)

    This Hermione dance is actual magic

    It's been clear for a long time that Hermione is the coolest character in the Harry Potter series. Now, we have definitive proof.

    YouTube personality and self-proclaimed Potterhead @KelseyEllison(opens in a new tab) recently appeared at MCM London's ComicCon and blew everyone away with a Hermione-inspired dance.

    SEE ALSO: 'Harry Potter and the Cursed Child' is pure magic

    You don't even have to like Harry Potter to envy this cosplay. It's that humbling.

    You're also going to need another view:

    And of course Potter fans wasted no time in meme-ing her performance:

    Of course, it would take actual magic for me to perform anything close to this. Students of Hogwarts, get on my case.

  • The yikes, unfollowing now meme imagines fictional characters cancellable backgrounds

    The yikes, unfollowing now meme imagines fictional characters cancellable backgrounds

    It's a fact of being online. At some point, you'll realize a person you followed — maybe for some innocuous joke years ago, or a random video they just posted — has a sketchy background. Then you've got to unfollow and disengage.

    (图1)

    And sure, that's an experience that's part and parcel with being online, but it's also kind of telling. The online world moves so fast that you people literally feel the need to tweet things like "oops didn't mean to retweet that problematic person" to wash their hands clean. Yes, it's impossible to background check every person you follow and yes, sometimes people also somehow miss how someone is clearly Not Good. And it's kind of hilarious to see people flip from "I like this person" to "nope nope nope" in an instant.

    People ran with the idea online and, of course, turned it into a meme. It became a copypasta where folks on Twitter would post something like "Yikes. Unfollowing Now. Had no idea..." and then, typically, fill in the rest with some sort of fictional character.

    The meme is a close cousin of the recent meme about softblocking people. The unfollow version is now everywhere with just about every kind of pop culture reference you could imagine.

    In the few days since the meme took off, it feels like everything and everyone has been unfollowed. It's become a test of your culture, historical, and political knowledge at this point. Go ahead and search "unfollowing now"(Opens in a new tab) on Twitter and be tested on how many you can decipher.

  • Here it is: The saddest chicken

    Here it is: The saddest chicken

    (图1)

    Every so often, Twitter gathers for one of its most powerful bonding experiences: making fun of gross food. On Monday, users gathered to mock this chicken, which is the worst-looking chicken we have ever seen.

    This chicken, which is not only completely unseasoned but seems to have never touched butter, garlic, or marinade of any kind, was tweeted by @corihealy(opens in a new tab). Crucially, though, it was not her chicken -- it belonged to her boyfriend's roommate.

    SEE ALSO: A 'Simpsons' writer created an awards show for fast food

    (图2)

    Enough people were horrified that the sad chicken eventually became a Twitter Moment(opens in a new tab). He didn't even use cooking oil! How is he gonna clean the baking sheet? (We assume he has not done it yet.)

    May none of us ever see a pan of meat so disturbing again.

  • 1,600 men sign full page New York Times ad in support of Dr. Christine Blasey Ford

    1,600 men sign full page New York Times ad in support of Dr. Christine Blasey Ford

    (图1)

    Tomorrow, Dr. Christine Blasey Ford is scheduled to testify about her alleged sexual assault by Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh in front of the Senate Judiciary Committee -- and television screens all across America.

    The challenge is immense and the stakes, incredibly high. On Wednesday, 1,600 men took out a full page ad in the New York Times in support of Dr. Ford.

    SEE ALSO: After Trump lashes out, sexual assault survivors share #WhyIDidntReport

    In 1991(opens in a new tab),1,600 black women took out a similar ad in the Times in defense of Anita Hill, who accused then nominee Clarence Thomas of sexual harassment. The ad was titled, "African-American Women in Defense of Themselves."

    This time, the men stood up.

    (图2)

    "We are 1,600 men who now stand behind both Professor Anita Hill, as well as Dr. Christine Blasey Ford, because we believe them,” the ad reads(opens in a new tab). "As men who are allies in the fight to end violence and harassment against women and girls, we write to express our strong support of Dr. Christine Blasey Ford … we believe survivors, and we call on all men of good will to stand with us to ensure that Dr. Blasey Ford’s story is carefully and fully examined without bias or prejudice.."

    The signatories explain(opens in a new tab) why they chose to include only men:

    "We are a group of men with varying political and legal views. But we each believe women should no longer have to carry these burdens alone."

    The campaign was assembled by the Phenomenal Women Action Campaign(opens in a new tab). The group put out a call to fund the ad over the weekend.

    Stylistically, the ad is almost identical to the ad put out in 1991, except this time, it includes men.

    (图3)

    It's a small change. And one that matters.

  • Stephen King apparently owns a Tesla and Elon Musk is very proud

    Stephen King apparently owns a Tesla and Elon Musk is very proud

    (图1)

    The king of horror has apparently gone electric.

    On Sunday, Stephen King tweeted to Elon Musk, telling him that he's "sort of liking" Tesla's silly "Fart" app.

    SEE ALSO: Elon Musk says ominous music, 'Rick and Morty' will soon keep Teslas safe

    While King didn't outright say he owned a Tesla, it's quite possible that he does, especially since Musk replied and thanked him for "owning a Tesla."

    (图2)

    As far as we know, this could be two famous men just chatting on Twitter or it could be good old paid-for advertising, but it's still notable. King is famous for many novels, but one that comes to mind now is Christine, a story about a car gone evil. And with Tesla's ever-improving machine learning capabilities... well, you could certainly say that it's smarter than a 1958 Plymouth Fury, and by extension, more dangerous -- should it go sentient and decide to pursue evil.

    As for the fart app King is referring to, it was added to Tesla cars in a Dec. 2018 update, alongside a new driving game and a special "romance mode." The app is more elaborate than one would assume, giving users a solid assortment of different fart sounds as well as the option to position fart sounds within the car.

  • TikToks latest obsession? Dabloons.

    TikToks latest obsession? Dabloons.

    TikTok's latest trend obsession is a tricky one to unpack. It's both obscure and absurd, beginning with a viral cat meme and ending with imaginary inflation. Yes, you read that right.

    (图1)

    Dabloons are going viral on TikTok at the moment, likely all over the FYP. The dedicated hashtag itself(Opens in a new tab) has over 254.1 million views at the time of writing.

    What are 'dabloons' and how did this all start?

    The word "doubloon" itself can be traced back to 16th-century Spain(Opens in a new tab), where they existed as gold coins and were used as currency for centuries. On TikTok today, doubloons remain a form of currency — just a fictional one.

    SEE ALSO: On TikTok, everyone is starring in their own TV show

    Dabloons originated in a meme from 2021, which began doing the rounds on Instagram after being posted by @catz.jpeg(Opens in a new tab) (which has over 128,000 followers and posts cat memes consistently). This meme, as many will recall, involved a kitten's paw held out in full stretch, with the caption "4 dabloons"(Opens in a new tab). Later, a variation of the meme(Opens in a new tab) popped up on the same account, featuring a black cat with the same caption, and a tiny paw holding up four fingers.

    According to Know Your Meme(Opens in a new tab), this post migrated to Tumblr and trekked over to TikTok, where it was met with equal popularity. The "4 dabloons cat" began being shared via TikTok's slideshow mode, in which several pictures can be posted and swiped through. Several versions of the cat were shared, mostly in photo stories that started with the words "hello traveler", offered an object or item, and then ended with a meme of the cat. Everything you want to trade costs "4 dabloons".

    Only thing to remember: dabloons are a fictional currency being used to trade and obtain fictional items. There is no official store, no external site offering dabloons. And despite comparisons(Opens in a new tab), dabloons are not cryptocurrency.

    How are people "collecting" dabloons?

    People are accounting for their dabloons, which are collected — or lost — by how many you come across on social media. Literally if you see a dabloon, you have earned a dabloon. Individual videos offer individual amounts and items; it depends on what you come across. For example, a video from influencer @seansvv(Opens in a new tab) is offering people a chance to be instantly relieved of their "dabloon debt"(Opens in a new tab). Just "like" the video and your imaginary debt is gone.

    TikTokker @britedragon explained it well(Opens in a new tab): the more people would see the ubiquitous cat meme with the four fingers held up, the more doubloons they collected. "It's like we're all playing neopets," they say. And that seems to be the point — the internet is playing one big game together.

    How far has this gone?

    People like @max.milam are keeping track of their dabloons(Opens in a new tab) on Excel spreadsheets. Others have analyzed rising "dabloon inflation"(Opens in a new tab). Users like @polyba(Opens in a new tab) explain their imaginary dabloon-based lives, which are extremely intricate. Then there are dedicated, niche like @dabloongrocerystore(Opens in a new tab) and @dabloonshq(Opens in a new tab) that have popped up, with tens of thousands of followers each.

    So it's all gone pretty far — all thanks to the power of TikTok. The word "dabloons" appears 21 times in this article (now 22), so does that mean you just earned 22 dabloons (now 23)? We're unsure, but enjoy.


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  • Tinder is about to look more like TikTok and Snapchat

    Tinder is about to look more like TikTok and Snapchat

    In the years since the ubiquitous dating app Tinder launched in 2012, its interface has stayed largely the same.

    (图1)

    Until now.

    Today Tinder is launching a slew of new features to serve Gen Z, which accounts for more than half of their users according to their press release. With the introduction of video and an Explore page, the app is going to look a lot more like TikTok and Snapchat.

    Let's breakdown the features:

    Videos in profiles

    Tinder wants to "bring the main character energy" to the app, invoking a popular TikTok meme(Opens in a new tab), by adding the ability for users to put videos on their profiles. They say this is part of making Tinder a "multi-dimensional experience."

    Users will be able to crop and upload videos as they are currently only able to with photos.

    Tinder's video feature in action Credit: Tinder

    A social experience called 'Hot Takes'

    Hot Takes jumps off of Tinder's experiential Swipe Night(Opens in a new tab), an interactive choose-your-own-adventure game within the app, and Vibes, a question-and-answer game to test your compatibility with other users. More than 20 million Tinder users participated in Swipe Night while Vibes led to more matches and Likes, which led to developers wanting to create similar events.

    Hot Takes is Tinder's newest iteration of this type of social experience — and the first time members can chat before matching (at least besides Platinum members(Opens in a new tab), who are able to send a message before matching). When playing, users will message someone else before they match about, what else, their hot takes. The game is timed and players have a chance to match with each other or let the timer run out and have the game restart with someone new.

    Tinder's new Hot Takes experience Credit: tinder

    Tinder adds an Explore page

    For the first time, Tinder has introduced an entirely new section — and a new way to match with people — with the Explore page. The mockup looks more like Snapchat's Discover than Instagram's Explore. Here, members can see potential matches who share similar interests (or passions, as they're called on Tinder) and see different aspects of the app like Festival Mode or the new Chef's Mode, where users who love cooking can show off their skills.

    In-app events like Hot Takes will also live in the Explore section when it launches later this summer.

    Tinder's new Explore page Credit: tinder

    Gen Z may now be the majority of Tinder's users, but they were too young to even be on the app when it launched nine years ago. As a younger generation of daters head to the app, Tinder wants to offer features that align with their values in order to stay at the forefront.

    2020 was Tinder's busiest year ever(Opens in a new tab), in no small part due to the pandemic. Time will tell if these new features encourage even more messages and matches.

    Related Video: We asked over 1,000 people about their post-COVID dating plans

  • André 3000 had the loveliest moment with a fan wearing a T-shirt with his face on it

    (图1)

    André 3000 had the loveliest moment with a fan wearing a T-shirt with his face on it

    Have you ever dreamed about casually running into your favourite celebrity and having a really lovely interaction with them?

    For one lucky person in New York City, this dream just came true big time.

    SEE ALSO: Hip-hop edition of 'Mean Tweets' features rappers reading out nasty comments

    Twitter user and major André 3000 fan @itsTiana(opens in a new tab) posted a photo of her meeting with the musician in New York City.

    Tiana tweeted that she was walking down a street in Soho wearing a T-shirt with André 3000's face on it when the man himself came walking out of a coffee shop.

    According to(opens in a new tab) Tiana, André 3000 was really excited to meet a fan dedicated enough to wear his face on their clothes.

    "He was acting just as hype as me," Tiana wrote.

    It's hard to see the print on the T-shirt in the photo with André so Tiana posted a close-up.

    The print on the shirt features André 3000 in his iconic suit from the 2014 OutKast reunion tour with the print reading: "Across cultures, darker people suffer more. Why?"

    Mr. 3000 also took photos of Tiana posing in her T-shirt.

    Go on and wear your fave celeb's face on your clothes, they might just be really into it.