To Lynch: To punish (a person) without legal process or authority,
Thanks. I usually try to avoid these sort of verbal faux pas, but every now and again a poor choice of phrase catches me out. I'm familiar enough with American history that I probably should have considered it might not come across well, so definitely my bad.That's okay. It has a lot of historical context in the United States that's still deeply disturbing. That's why I misinterpreted the intention of your post (it reminded me of earlier in the thread when people were wrongly comparing Axanar's team to Nazi Germany). But now harm done, and happy to move on.![]()
Kangaroo court, Mob rule are other terms. William Lynch set up his own self-constituted judicial tribunal in Virginia (1835) from which the phase Lynch mob, lynching became coined and often resulted in hangings or floggings.Hence his use of it, which I now understand. However, for many Americans, it immediately evokes the grotesque murder of Black people.
Thanks. I usually try to avoid these sort of verbal faux pas, but every now and again a poor choice of phrase catches me out. I'm familiar enough with American history that I probably should have considered it might not come across well, so definitely my bad.![]()
Hey dont worry too much I get both sides here, I am always! putting my foot in it when talking to people overseas lol us Brits have a way with words others dont always see or like :-(.
We mean nothing by them but others dont get the way we mean it.
Perhaps you could float a thought that if a project makes it through the review process one might presume they would face, then the studios might consider allowing on a case by case basis crowdfunding up to a certain level, within explicit guidelines such as indicating they are sanctioned, that they follow guidelines about what the money is spent on, auditing, performance (say finish within 6 months or close down and refund), etc?
I imagine this might be seen as a burden on the studios, but it would move the crowdfunding issue to *after* the screening.
The only book the two of them wrote: Inside Star Trek. In short, they dispute the claimed volume of mail received and postulate that it was color TV giant RCA which influenced NBC to keep the show on the air for a 3rd season due to how well the show did with color TV households.
Not at all surprising.So, an exchange between Alec and a fan film producer which has been posted on Facebook:
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Interesting piece from Newsweek about the guidelines brouhaha:
http://www.newsweek.com/rules-acqui...oned-guidelines-mark-end-star-trek-fan-463542
According to Star Trek: Phoenix's Twitter guidelines have been rejected and there will be official news Tuesday.
AP leading the effort wasn't a great idea
According to Star Trek: Phoenix's Twitter guidelines have been rejected and there will be official news Tuesday.
AP leading the effort wasn't a great idea
I've seen the Phoenix twitter make more than a few odd claims like that, like Beyond being delayed in the US until the day of the 50th anniversary, so I'd take it with a grain of salt unless they've got a good source they're linking to for that.According to Star Trek: Phoenix's Twitter guidelines have been rejected and there will be official news Tuesday.
AP leading the effort wasn't a great idea
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