You were about 12 or so issues in (of 60). So a good start!
Been a while since I read it so I may be wrong, but I thought it clearly was.IIRC I don't think the exact cause of the Y-chromopocalypse was ever revealed, though I think I remember reading that the author said that despite there being several red herrings, there IS a definitive answer and the clues are there for people to find on their own.
Yep. Personally, I never liked the "Mother Gaia" one. And if this was the right one, The Apocalypse should have happened after the birth of Dolly..The comic gave multiple possible reasons, it’s never said which one was correct, and the author has never said either.
It interesting because the original comics really didn't touch the gender/sexes subject. I remember only one character that perhaps was a transgender man, and I'm not even sure, perhaps she was a cross-dresser/drag king who was doing it just for the money (in the series some women missed the men so much that they were content with even a passable imitation).“I think every single person who is working on the show—from the writers to the directors to the cast and the crew—are making a show that affirms that trans women are women, trans men are men, nonbinary people are nonbinary, and that is part of the sort of richness of the world we get to play with.”
Yeah, and I think I read somewhere that there's a species of rat that has managed to ditch the Y-chromosome altogether. It's really not as important as had previously been believed. I think a lot of it comes from some fundamental misconceptions about how evolution works, i.e. everything has an optimal purpose, vs. the reality that is "whatever ad-hoc mutation worked first, tends to stick". Natural selection isn't picky.I'd heard of cisgender women with Y chromosomes, but it wasn't until reading comments related to this show on The AV Club recently that I learned about XX males, i.e., cisgender males with no Y chromosome. According to Wiki, "This syndrome [occurs] in approximately 1:20,000 newborn males," so apparently an insta-plague of death for all mammals with Y chromosomes wouldn't make cisgender men as extinct as I'd always thought.
To put that in perspective, there are about 875,000 humans in my hometown of San Francisco, so, if half of them are men, that would suggest there are roughly 20 cisgender men without Y chromosomes in this city alone. Which is certainly rare, but not anywhere near as rare as the comic series suggested, in which Yorick was the only confirmed cisgender man left on Earth. Fascinating.
"The uploader has not made this video available in your country."New teaser with more dialogue from Yorick and Agent 355:
Because the thing it’s advertised for may not be available in your region."The uploader has not made this video available in your country."
Can someone explain to me the point of region restricting advertisements? In this day and age especially, it just boggles the mind.
distribution rights. Another company must own the rights to show it in the UK.Can someone explain to me the point of region restricting advertisements? In this day and age especially, it just boggles the mind.
That sentence made no sense whatsoever.Because the thing it’s advertised for may not be available in your region.
I don't think advertising is covered by distribution rights. If that were the case then I shouldn't be able to see *anything* to do with any TV releases outside of the UK. And yet I do, all the time.distribution rights. Another company must own the rights to show it in the UK.
I can see it fine in Canada oddly.
Ok maybe they paid extra for the exclusive rights to advertise it?That sentence made no sense whatsoever.
I don't think advertising is covered by distribution rights. If that were the case then I shouldn't be able to see *anything* to do with any TV releases outside of the UK. And yet I do, all the time.
This is not a legal requirement, it's a choice, and that choice just strikes me as dumb. I mean is there such a thing as too much exposure? Too much positive word of mouth?
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