#hermes film
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poorly-drawn-mdzs · 10 days ago
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The Odyssey would have been a lot shorter if Odysseus gave the Cyclops weed instead of wine.
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mttztrading · 22 days ago
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The gods have forgotten the song of their love!
Allison Russell, Phillip Boykin, Jordan Fisher, Maia Reficco, and Malcolm Armwood perform Chant - Hadestown on Broadway
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lynx-224 · 1 year ago
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the face i make every time someone compares the pjo tv show to the movies
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frenchnewwaves · 1 year ago
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How will us girls with bangs ever recover from her passing?
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l33ap · 1 year ago
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María Félix in Piazza San Marco for the Venice Film Festival 1959
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keylana-dragon · 2 years ago
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I didn't choose the simp life, the simp life chose me.
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celebratetheclassics · 2 years ago
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Asta Nielsen
German Postcard by Verlag Herm
via: https://www.flickr.com/photos/truusbobjantoo/5424682974 
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kittieshauntedourfantasy · 1 year ago
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Just watched the FNAF movie and it was??? SUPER GOOD???
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villainesfilles · 9 months ago
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Jane Birkin
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archivyrep · 2 years ago
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Archivists on the Issues: Sophisticated Bureaucracies, Archives, and Fictional Depictions [part 2]
Continued from part 1
Archivists on the Issues is a forum for archivists to discuss the issues we are facing today. Today’s post is by Burkely Hermann (me), Metadata Librarian for National Security Archive and current I&A Blog Coordinator. There are spoilers for each of the books, animated series, films, and other media he will be discussing. It was originally published on the Issues and Advocacy blog on Jan. 3, 2023. Also posted on my Wading Through the Cultural Stacks WordPress blog on Feb. 13, 2022.
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While bureaucracies are famously criticized in novels like Catch-22 and The Trial, they are a major part of other media, like the acclaimed animated series, Futurama. In the series, Hermes Conrad (voiced by Phil LaMarr), is a bureaucrat who works for the Central Bureaucracy, which manages legal, financial, and business matters in the city of New New York. In one episode, "Lethal Inspection", a physical file archive is shown, with Hermes taking a folder out of a file cabinet. It is later revealed that he was the inspector who approved a defective robot named Bender (voiced by John DiMaggio), after be burns the file.
Brad Houston, a Document Services Manager for the city of Milwaukee, said the physical file archive is really a records center because it has semi-active records. He described how the Milwaukee records center works, noting the importance of filling out transfer forms correctly, pointing out that records are organized by box with specific assigned numbers, and importance of records management training. As another archivist put it, information and records management is as much about understanding bureaucratic processes and human behavior as it is about the records and information.
While there are many other examples of fictional bureaucracies, [10] one specifically comes to mind: the Elven bureauacracy in the children's adventure and supernatural comedy-drama animated series, Hilda. An elf named Alfur (voiced by Rasmus Hardiker) is a series protagonist. Like the other elves in the series, they can only be seen if their tiny paperwork is signed and filled out. In the first episode, the protagonist, Hilda (voiced by Bella Ramsey), tries to come to peace with the elves, who see her as a menace because she stepped through their houses for years without realizing it. In the process, she goes through various Elven political officials who declare there is nothing that can be done and that the matter is out of their hands.
As the series continues, Alfur becomes a correspondent in the city of Trolberg, and files reports about his daily activities in the city, where Hilda is now living. Characters such as Frida (voiced by Ameerah Falzon-Ojo) and Deputy Gerda (voiced by Lucy Montgomery) are shown to care about paperwork as much as him, as does the witchy librarian named Kaisa (voiced by Kaisa Hammarlund). In other episodes, Alfur proudly tells a legendary Elf story about a fight over a real estate contract, he meets a society which doesn't use paperwork, and emphasizes the importance of reading the fine print. The series also features elf-mail, known as "email", which is sent from the countryside into the city with various couriers. Alfur later states that elves pride themselves on the accuracy of historical records and says he is impressed by how Hilda uses loopholes. In the next to last episode of the show's second season, Alfur convinces an elf sent as his replacement to write an eyewitness confirmation form, confirming that his reports from Trolberg, said to be "the most requested from the official archive", are accurate and true.
Hilda, emphasizes importance of accountability within hierarchies more than fictional bureaucracies shown in The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy and Futurama. Alfur is graded on a performance management system and experiences some level of bureaucratic accountability. The latter is achieved, within institutions, through strategies, administrative rules, budget reviews, and performance management. It can also be accompanied by citizen accountability, which attempts to hold government administrators accountable through forums and laws, using communication technologies to directly access bureaucratic information, monitor government activities, and give feedback on delivery of public services. However, Futurama and Hilda make clear the value of records managers (and archivists) who have developed strategies and experience with relationship-building and negotiating bureaucratic politics.
Many archives, these days, are not "faceless" or "nameless" as those in fiction, nor do they encourage falsification of information to protect individuals. Instead, some likely came into existence during the Progressive Era to "lessen anxiety" about issues such as race. While some bureaucratic records, within archives, may be considered "cold", there have been efforts to humanize the files, especially those about human atrocities. Even so, some archivists remain impatient with "inanities" of bureaucracies they are part of. [11]
Bureaucracy remains part and parcel of archives. There have been efforts, in recent years, to reduce bureaucracies said to be "overlapping" and related claims that government by bureaucracy is dead or no longer necessary. Despite this, committing information to paper, then managing, or shuffling, that paper within a bureaucracy remains a "source of an essential power." After all, records have the power to legitimize bureaucracy, while promoting political hegemony and constructing social memory. In fact, in the 1985 film, Brazil, a controlling bureaucracy rules people's lives and crushes spirits. [12] The film's protagonist, Sam Lowry, has been described by some as an archivist who has "dreamlike moments" and sees himself as a winged superhero. He tries to tamper with data in order to save the woman he loves before his vision is shown to be an illusion.
While there won't be any "bureaucratic cock-ups" or Vogan Constructor Fleets demolishing Earth to make way for a hyperspace expressway, [13] sophisticated and complex bureaucracy will remain an integral part of archives, whether we like it or not.
© 2022-2023 Burkely Hermann. All rights reserved.
Notes
[10] The Wikipedia category "Bureaucracy in fiction" lists 50 entries, including Loki TV series, the anti-communist novel 1984, One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, and The Pale King.
[11] Yakel, Elizabeth. "Reviews." The American Archivist 64, no. 2 (2001): 407-409; Pierce, Pamela. "Cruising the Library: Perversities in the Organization of Knowledge." The American Archivist 81, no. 1 (2018): 262; Arroyo-Ramirez, Elvia. "Paper Cadavers: The Archives of Dictatorship in Guatemala." The American Archivist 80, no. 1 (2017): 244-245; Jimerson, Randall C. "Archiving the Unspeakable: Silence, Memory, and the Photographic Record in Cambodia." The American Archivist 78, no. 1 (2015): 265-266; Radoff, Morris. "Recent Deaths." The American Archivist 42, no. 2 (1979): 264.
[12] Baker, Kathryn. "The Business of Government and the Future of Government Archives." The American Archivist 60, no. 2 (1997): 237, 241, 252; Cline, Scott. "'To the Limit of Our Integrity': Reflections on Archival Being." The American Archivist 72, no. 2 (2009): 331-333, 340. Cline also says that records can reinforce cultural mythology, and bolster democracy and democratic institutions.
[13] Adams, Douglas. “The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy.” In The Ultimate Hitchhiker’s Guide, 16, 25-26. New York: Gramercy Books, 2005. Vogans are also described, on page 38. as "one of the most unpleasant races in the galaxy...[not] evil, but bad-tempered, bureaucratic, officious and callous".
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abearthatwrites · 21 days ago
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A Brief Rundown of the IRL Ithaca Saga (to the best of my memory, in probably not chronological order)
jorge (creator, odysseus) decided it'll be cool to celebrate the ithaca saga with the epic cast via a trip to ithaca, greece
surely nothing can go wrong
mico (telemachus) seemingly found out about the trip with the rest of the fandom. he proceeded to plot a trip to ithaca
the epic cast dealt with multiple broken vans and missed a ferry by one minute. they had to cancel a stream because they were too exhausted
mico made it onto a plane
ithaca got hit by a typhoon, forcing them to move another stream indoors
mico got banned from tiktok. it was reversed
mason (tireseas) asked luke (zeus) to stop the rain. luke refused
the crew hiked up to odysseus' palace. they ran into a roadblock. mason looked into the future and did not see a way around it. (they found a way around it)
the crew found a well and sang their epic songs into it. except jp (crew) who just sang happy birthday
janani (aphrodite) also sang "royal we" into the well
anna (penelope) made it onto the plane to fly out to ithaca
hermes (troy) decided to take a plane to ithaca like a normal human instead of teleporting. he got side-eyed by a woman at the airport as he slept sprawled out in a chair. this quickly became a meme
hermes arrived in ithaca to the delight of everyone except jorge. mico also appeared in his videos. mico still had not updated anything after getting on the plane
anna's connecting flight got cancelled, leaving her stranded in a fancy hotel. she struggled to find the toilet in her hotel room
mico finally updated, claiming he was stuck in munich. mason appears in the video and gives him a water bottle, proving he is lying
the fandom believes mico anyway
mico is forced to post another video revealing he had been gaslighting us basically the entire time and was just delayed in getting to ithaca, that was all
troy and talya (circe), in character, talk about tea. troy says the tea tastes like her father's approval. earle (ares) then asks for 1000 cups and breaks down crying as luke cuts the camera
jorge posts a video apologizing for mico's absence, encouraging him to fly to ithaca, new york. mico appears in the background of this video
mico posts a video saying that he's finally in ithaca, but the crew is in ithaca, new york. jorge appears in the background of this video
jp films a behind the scenes video, calling out "some random guy" who just showed up asking if anyone knows jorge. it's mico
janani sings "royal we" again, but after she says "troy was breached" troy comes out screaming in pain. mico appears in the background of this, filming the video from two points above
it's time for the ithaca saga livestream... except it gets cancelled because the connection is bad and jorge's devices are dying
TL;DR: the gods saw the epic crew in ithaca and went "do you guys think it'll be really funny if we just. recreated the odyssey"
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ajl1963 · 2 months ago
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Astaire & Rogers and the 1930s Aesthetic Part One: Flying Down to Rio
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mttztrading · 5 months ago
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We raise 'em high and drink 'em dry, to Orpheus and all of us.
Hadestown - West End: Act 2
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enfes-kanal · 4 months ago
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#enfeskanal 💖
Hazreti İdris Aleyhisselam.. Beğenilerle, yorumlarla kanalıma destek olun. Kalıcı tâkip lütfen 🙏💖 https://youtu.be/kz2Z6jUSG0Y?feature=shared
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sysiheart · 3 months ago
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Athena in like god hospital barely alive:
Hermes: GIRLLLLL ur boi beat up poseidon LMAOOOOO wanna see i filmed it
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jellyfishbeansontoast · 1 year ago
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no bc they’re perfect. i feel like a kid again when i watch this show, getting excited over pjo lol
and absolutely IF EVIL WHY CUTE HUH i just 🫠
the funny thing is like I didn't experience pjo as a child like I literally read the first series around this time two years ago but I feel like I've loved it for so long they're literally the books that got me back into reading
I'm kind of excited to see luke evil like 🤭 is that bad??
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