from the casual critic

Warning: Contains spoilers

#tv #fiction #anime #SF

For as long as humans have dreamt of robots, they have dreamt of them becoming human. Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) remains the ambition of most AI companies, despite current LLMs exhibiting worrying tendencies to ramble, hallucinate or engage in the mass production of child pornography. With this aspiration comes the attendant fear that, once sentient, the robots will take our jobs, murder us all in our sleep, or simply transform us into paperclips. Genocidal AIs are such a science-fiction staple that introducing a robot in Act One almost inevitably leads to the AI Apocalypse by Act Three.

Compared to this pervasive trope, 2023 anime series Pluto offers a refreshing alternative. Inspired by the 1960s Astroboy comics, Pluto is a short and sympathetic meditation on the nature of humanity, delivering an emotional gut punch with almost every episode. Its story and beautifully rendered aesthetic are a homage to the High Futurist optimism of a bygone era, composed of flying cars, skyscraper cities embraced by bucolic countryside, and peaceful robot and human coexistence.

Not that there is no conflict in Pluto. Episode one starts us off with not one, but two murders: a highly advanced robot and a renowned roboticist. Symbols left at the crime scenes suggest the murders are connected, but this presents an enigma: forensics indicate a robotic suspect, yet Pluto’s robots obey an equivalent of Asimov’s First Law of Robotics and hence cannot harm humans. It is up to Gesicht, Europol’s foremost robotic detective, to crack this case.

Gesicht has a personal investment in this investigation. As more robots and humans fall victim to the mysterious murderer referred to as the titular Pluto, we learn that all of them are connected to the ‘39th Central Asian War’: the invasion of the ‘Kingdom of Persia’ on the ostensible grounds that it illegally stockpiled robots of mass destruction – a very thinly veiled reference to the 2003 Iraq War. The robots being targeted are the world’s seven most advanced robots, which includes Gesicht himself. All were to some degree involved with the invasion of the Kingdom of Persia, while all human victims were on the ‘Bora Inquiry Commission’, an international inspection team sent in ahead of the invasion to determine whether the Kingdom did indeed possess robots of mass destruction. Someone is out for vengeance, but the question is who, and why.

A whodunnit at a surface level, Pluto’s real story is an existential reflection on the nature of humanity, and how a robot might attain it. While not programmed to have them, Pluto’s most advanced robots start to experience emotions as an emergent property driven by a desire to emulate and understand their human counterparts. Humans might remark on robotic superiority in terms of intellect, durability and the absence of emotional complications, but many robots feel afflicted with a pervasive melancholia because they cannot access the human way of relating to the world. They want to experience a sunrise, not merely detect the appearance of a nearby star over the horizon.

Trauma is the key that unlocks the emotional door for Gesicht and others who fought and killed thousands of robotic adversaries in the 39th Central Asian War. As we encounter the robot victors, we see them struggle with depression, hate, grief, regret, and guilt, exacerbated by their unfamiliarity with emotional feelings, and a lack of human understanding, bordering on callousness, for what they are going through. Robots prove particularly vulnerable to traumatic events because their memories don’t fade or alter with time, causing one to desperately ask a human whether the hate it feels will ever diminish.

Hate is at the centre of the paradox that Pluto interrogates. If attaining humanity requires a robot to feel, then how can it remain subject to Asimov’s First Law? A robot that can feel, can hate. A robot that can hate, could kill. After all humans kill other humans all the time. Some characters contend that might be the necessary ingredient for emotional awakening, and it is certainly a driving force for many characters, both human and robot. Attempting to answer whether hate can indeed be overcome, Pluto explores if and how a cycle of hate and vengeance, both at the personal and societal level, can ever be broken. In the end, it affirms that it can, arriving at similar conclusion to Thunderbolts* in showing how kindness, forgiveness and love are the way out of the hateful doom spiral.

Pluto executes its introspection on the nature of humanity intelligently and with real sympathy for all its characters, villains included. Compared to my recent read The Interdependency, there is a remarkable amount of backstory and character development in a mere eight episodes. There are some aspects though where Pluto’s evocation of the Golden Age of science fiction leads it astray. Most unforgivable is the extremely limited presence of female characters, who are relegated to either loving wives or emotional sisters. There is no reason why all of the seven main robots should be male, nor for the overwhelming majority of the support cast to be the same. And while the patriarchy may be the most obvious, Pluto on the whole exhibits the problematic lack of diversity that sadly remains emblematic of much anime. An upgrade to the 21st century was absolutely warranted here, and the absence of it is disappointing. Environmentally Pluto has equally remained in the 1960s. We see plenty of flying cars, but no mass transit. Skyscraper cities, but no renewable energy. For an otherwise very carefully composed series, this is a crude techno-optimist streak, with technological development serving to both magically overcome environmental destruction and reimpose traditional gender norms.

These are not trivial critiques, and I would have preferred for Pluto to reinvent utopian futurism for the 2020s rather than simply importing it wholesale from the 1960s, if only because we could all do with an alternative aesthetic to the all-pervasive cyberpunk or Terminator derivatives. Choosing this traditional Golden Age of Sci-Fi setting places Pluto outside the contemporary utopian aesthetic of solarpunk, but it is not a bad thing to have multiple utopias to choose from. Despite these flaws, Pluto is a beautifully crafted, emotionally compelling and intellectually engaging series that most certainly deserves viewing. It is more than redeemed by its optimism on the potential for human/robot coexistence, its belief in empathy, care and love as the real keys to humanity, and its insistence that our future isn’t determined by technology, but by what we choose to do with it. And possibly, by what it chooses to do with itself.

Notes & Suggestions

  • Another excellent meditation on technological advance, utopian possibilities, what it means to be human and how synthetic constructs fit into all of this is animated series Pantheon. Similarly, Citizen Sleeper is a comparatively short but beautifully crafted game that also mixes musing son synthetic existence with an insistence on kindness and mutual aid, although in a distinctly more cyberpunk dystopian setting.
  • For a running commentary on all things wrong with AI, I recommend following Cory Doctorow. I reviewed his excellent book The Internet Con some time ago.
  • The Imaginary Worlds podcast has an episode on solarpunk, as well as one on architects imagining other possible futures.
 
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from Roscoe's Quick Notes

Big Ten Basketball

Wisconsin Badgers at Illinois Fighting Illini

My basketball game of choice tonight will a Big Ten Conference contest between the Wisconsin Badgers and the Illinois Fighting Illini. Rather than listen to a radio call of the game, I'll first try to watch it broadcast by Peacock TV on the smaller set back in my room.

And the adventure continues.

 
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from nieuws van children for status

Het nieuws dat slachtoffers van seksueel geweld op minderjarigen vanaf 01/02/2026 in België een gratis advocaat krijgen is nu een week oud. Jo de Meester, Stafhouder van de Balie Antwerpen, en Paul Van Tigchelt, parlementslid van OpenVLD anders in de commissie justitie, reageren op de aankondiging.

Jo de Meester reageert

Jo de Meester is de Stafhouder van de Balie van Antwerpen. Vreemd is dat het de Stafhouder en niet zijn Voorzitter van het Bureau voor Juridische Bijstand is die reageert. De OVB houdt hen nochtans altijd voor als aparte juridische en financiële entiteiten met elk hun verschillende bevoegdheid. (Ai die lange ego-advocaten-tenen?) Jo de Meester vertelt:

Ik verwijs naar de berichtgeving van afgelopen zondag op de VRT.

In Brussel bestaat het project Lawyers Victim Assistance waarnaar werd verwezen in het persartikel dat in samenwerking met Brussel Hoofdstedelijk Gewest enige tijd geleden werd opgezet.

Het Federale regeerakkoord van januari 2025 bepaalde als volgt:

“We zorgen dat slachtoffers van ernstige geweldsdelicten en zedenfeiten beroep kunnen doen op algemene bijstand door een advocaat zowel voor als tijdens hun verhoor. Er wordt een systeem van permanentie georganiseerd binnen de advocatuur, zodat deze slachtoffers, 24/7 de nodige gespecialiseerde juridische ondersteuning kunnen krijgen.”

Het Ministerie van Justitie, OVB, OBFG en de lokale balies bekijken hoe deze zorg kan gerealiseerd worden over gans België, waarbij gekeken wordt naar de ervaringen van Lawyers Victim Assistance.

Er is op dit ogenblik nog geen nieuwe wetgeving hierover afgekondigd.

De gesprekken zijn lopende. Ik houd u uiteraard verder op de hoogte.

Het moge duidelijk zijn, we zijn in België ver van huis wanneer het gaat om slachtoffers juridische bijstand te verlenen.

Paul Van Tigchelt reageert

Morgen, 11/02/2026, in de commissie justitie in het parlement stelt Paul Van Tigchelt, volgens agenda, vraag 12 over “De gratis hulp van een advocaat voor slachtoffers van verkrachting of partnergeweld”

Bespreking beleidsnota minister van justitie

Morgen vanaf 11u wordt in de commissie justitie de beleidsnota van de minister van justitie, Annelies Verlinden, besproken.

In bijzonder interesseert ons volgende passages:

In overleg met de balies zorgen we, samen met de minister bevoegd voor gelijke kansen, ervoor dat slacht- offers van intrafamiliaal- en seksueel geweld beroep kunnen doen op juridische bijstand zodat we hen beter kunnen informeren over hun rechten en opties van bij het begin. Hiertoe wordt een systeem van permanen- tie georganiseerd binnen de advocatuur, zodat deze slachtoffers, 24/7 de nodige gespecialiseerde juridische ondersteuning kunnen krijgen.

We moedigen de verschillende wijzen van alternatieve geschillenbe- slechting ook aan via het systeem van de juridische rechtsbijstand. Hierover traden wij in overleg gaan met de Ordes van Advocaten. Hun concreet voorstel hiertoe wordt afgewacht.

Daarnaast willen we de juridische tweedelijnsbijstand bestendigen en herzien. Zoals eerder toegelicht, is het daarbij van belang om in het systeem van juridische bijstand de alternatieve vormen van geschillenoplossing, zoals de bemiddeling, te faciliteren.

Waar zijn de centen, mevrouw de minister?

Wij reageren diepgaand komend weekend op dit alles, samen met een blik omtrent de internationale verplichtingen die België al decennia schendt …


alle informatie op deze site, zoals maar niet beperkt tot documenten en/of audio-opnames en/of video-opnames en/of foto's, is gemaakt en/of verzameld en gepubliceerd in het belang van gerechtigheid, samenleving en het Universele Recht op Waarheid

children for status is een onafhankelijk collectief dat schuldig verzuim door de Staat ten aanzien van seksueel geweld op minderjarigen en kinderhandel oplossingsgericht documenteert en aanklaagt

 
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from barelycompiles

Disable swap

Swap is disk space that linux uses to overflow memory when the RAM is full. But k8s needs to know exactly how much memory is being used. Swap might falsify measurements.

swapoff -a

Persist across reboots by commenting out any swap lines in fstab:

sed -i '/ swap / s/^/#/' /etc/fstab

Verify:

free -h

Load kernel modules

OverlayFS

This is a Filesystem that lets you stack image layers for container runtimes like containerd. For example the files inside the container might be different but the baseOS or even some necessary binaries might be the same and our containers can share those.

br_netfilter

Pods communicate to each other over the Linux bridge via iptables. The Linux bridge however usually operates at layer 2 (MAC Adresses) and not layer 3 (IP). We need to force traffic within the bridge to go through iptables.

without br_netfilter:

Pod A -> bridge -> Pod B (iptables never sees this)

with br_netfilter:

Pod A -> bridge -> netfilter/iptables -> Pod B (rules are applied!)

For this to work, we also need to modify kernel parameters:

cat <<EOF | tee /etc/sysctl.d/k8s.conf 
net.bridge.bridge-nf-call-iptables = 1 
net.bridge.bridge-nf-call-ip6tables = 1 
net.ipv4.ip_forward = 1 
EOF

ip_forward=1 enables the node to forward packets between network interfaces, essentially turning it into a router. Without it, traffic can't flow between pods on different nodes or between pods and the outside world.

apply:

sysctl --system

Verify:

sysctl net.bridge.bridge-nf-call-iptables 
sysctl net.ipv4.ip_forward
Load both modules
modprobe overlay 
modprobe br_netfilter

Make them load on every boot

cat <<EOF | tee /etc/modules-load.d/k8s.conf 
overlay br_netfilter 
EOF```

#### Install containerd

```bash
# Install containerd 
apt-get update 
apt-get install -y containerd 

# Generate default config 
mkdir -p /etc/containerd 
containerd config default | tee /etc/containerd/config.toml 

# CRITICAL: Set the systemd cgroup driver 
# Find the line \[plugins."io.containerd.grpc.v1.cri".containerd.runtimes.runc.options\] 
# and set SystemdCgroup = true 

sed -i 's/SystemdCgroup = false/SystemdCgroup = true/' /etc/containerd/config.toml 

# Restart containerd 
systemctl restart containerd 
systemctl enable containerd

Install kubelet, kubeadm, and kubectl

kubelet runs on every node. It receives the pod specs from the API server and ensures the pods are running and healthy.

kubeadm handles cluster initiation and node joining. It sets up certs, etcd, the control plane, components etc. Then it mostly just sits there.

kubectl is the cli to interface with k8s, usually not needed on nodes but often installed anyways.

# Install dependencies
apt-get update
apt-get install -y apt-transport-https ca-certificates curl gpg

# Add the Kubernetes apt repo signing key
curl -fsSL https://pkgs.k8s.io/core:/stable:/v1.31/deb/Release.key | gpg --dearmor -o /etc/apt/keyrings/kubernetes-apt-keyring.gpg

# Add the repo
echo 'deb [signed-by=/etc/apt/keyrings/kubernetes-apt-keyring.gpg] https://pkgs.k8s.io/core:/stable:/v1.31/deb/ /' | tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/kubernetes.list

# Install
apt-get update
apt-get install -y kubelet kubeadm kubectl

# Pin versions so apt-get upgrade doesn't accidentally break your cluster
apt-mark hold kubelet kubeadm kubectl

# Enable kubelet (it will crash-loop until kubeadm join configures it, that's normal)
systemctl enable --now kubelet

Join a cluster

from the control plane node: kubeadm token create --print-join-command

This outputs something like: kubeadm join 192.168.1.10:6443 --token abcdef.1234567890abcdef --discovery-token-ca-cert-hash sha256:abc123...

Run this command on the worker node.

 
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from strugglinghuman

Day 1: 30 Days of Healing Post Breakup Prompt: Describe the emotions you are experiencing post breakup.

Betrayal, pain, deceit, insecure, deficient, angry, confused. I am feeling all of these things. They swirl through my brain, completely unrestrained wreaking havoc on my brain. How to you coalesce the feelings of love you have for someone with the knowledge that they are not good for you? How do you make your heart believe what your brain already knows?

Throughout this relationship I was honest, giving, loving, and caring. That's not to say I was perfect, because I was not. However, I know that I gave mt all and put in my best effort to make my partner feel loved. There were multiple occasions where I did not feel like this effort was being matched. I would voice my feelings only for my partner to turn it into something much bigger than it was, unwilling to compromise and making it into an attack against their character instead of listening to how I am feeling. This repeated dismissal of my feelings lead me to feel inadequate and like I was simply asking for too much.

This feeling was intensified when I made a compromise I would normally never make in shoving my own feelings aside about my partner being in contact with their ex. They swore to me that there were boundaries, that they don't talk every day, that its only ever texting, never phone calls. All of these were lies. Even on a weekend with just the two of us on vacation, when we rarely see each other in person due to being long distance, they were texting their ex. They texted their ex while we were in bed together. The claim was always that they are just friends and completely platonic, but I know better. The relationship between them is one of codependence and one that never, for one day, took a pause. They went straight from romantic partners who talk every day to “friends” who talk every day. This constant gaslighting left me confused and feeling pathetic.

When I finally said enough was enough and that I couldn't do it anymore my partner chose their ex. When push came to shove and they had to pick who stayed in their life they choose their ex. This makes me feel pain and betrayal. I feel like someone has hold of my heart and is SQEEZING it. I am so heart broken over this betrayal. I am heart broken that someone I put so much love and energy into could treat me this way, could choose someone who treated them so terribly instead.

I feel lost and hopeless. I feel like I'll never find someone who gives me the same energy and effort that I give them. I feel scared to trust anyone or open up ever again. I feel broken. I feel everything and nothing simultaneously.

 
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from Tuesdays in Autumn

I was all of nine years old when I first heard Blondie on the radio and first saw them on TV. Like many others of my generation I was fascinated by Debbie Harry. It's an appeal that still hasn't altogether faded: even now I have a couple of Blondie LPs on my shelves & half a dozen of their 7” singles. On Wednesday, I finished reading Harry's 2019 memoir Face It. I had been mildly curious about the book when it came out, though not quite so curious that I didn't mind waiting until I found a cheap second-hand copy of it somewhere. Not until the other weekend did one turn up: at the Oxfam shop in Chepstow. The asking price was a reasonable £2.99.

As is very often the case with celebrity autobiographies, it's not entirely the subject's own work. At least in this instance there's no hidden ghost-writer: a line on the title page states up-front that it's “in collaboration with Sylvie Simmons and based on a series of recent exclusive interviews.” There is very much the feeling that the story is told in Harry's own words, but, perhaps because of the collaborative composition, one feels at times not quite fully on-board a first-person narration. It's no masterpiece, but there is plenty of interest even for the casual fan. For me, the most absorbing chapters were the ones tracing the singer's pre-fame progress through various bohemian milieux in late '60s and early '70s New York. Among the illustrations are many portraits of Harry sent to her by fans: these provide a intriguing counterpart to the numerous snapshots of the almost invariably photogenic chanteuse.


In today's post, a CD including a selection of Philip Glass's Etudes for piano, performed by the Dutch pianist Feico Deutekom. For what are relatively recent compositions, there are a good many different recordings out there. Indeed, I used to own the composer's own renditions of the first ten Etudes. I didn't hold on to that one as I didn't like all ten of the pieces, and there was sometimes the sense that Glass was playing near the limits of his ability. Deutekom's versions appealed precisely because they weren't a complete set. I gather Vanessa Wagner's recent recording of all twenty pieces has been hailed by many as the best yet, and I was tempted to acquire that version. My suspicion, though, is that ca. two hours of Glass on solo piano, no matter how well-executed, is likely to be just a bit too much for me.

I wonder if Phil and Debbie ever crossed paths in the early '70s. Might Debbie have served Phil a drink in one of her waitressing jobs? Might Debbie have hailed Phil's taxi when he was a cab driver?


The cheese of the week has been Roquefort. I bought a wedge from the Newhall Farm Shop on Saturday. I'd long been resistant to the allure of blue cheese until my first encounter with Roquefort about nine months ago. I had wondered if a sheepsmilk blue might have any more appeal than the cowsmilk ones I'd hitherto disliked. Not only did I love it at first taste, it opened the way for me to be able to appreciate the likes of Stilton and Gorgonzola, that I had previously disdained.

 
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from audiobook-reviews

CD cover of the audiobook «The Proving Ground» by  Michael Connelly

Audible link

This latest thriller by author Michael Connelly is putting it's finger on a very timely issue. Combined with the excellent reading by Peter Giles this makes for probably my favorite audiobook of 2025.

Story

How much do people, young people, teenagers even, get influence by AI chat bots? Especially since there are numerous apps promoting AI companions as friends, therapists or girlfriends even. This is a very real issue and a very new one. Michael Connelly tackles the issue in convincing fashion.

In the story, an AI companion advised a teenage boy to kill his ex. Now the two families are suing the company behind the bot. The company, which is trying to sell to one of the big players, is under immense pressure to settle the matter quietly. It also has vast sums of investor money to work with.

But don't fret — we are not about to get bogged down in endless legal maneuvering. This is both due to our main character, the Lincoln Lawyer, who is pushing hard for a trial, but also due to how the story is written. It is not wasting any time, progressing fast and often skipping unimportant bits, opting to instead summarize them in one or two phrases. This makes for a surprisingly short book, but one that is never boring.

Michael Connelly shows the sort power these companies have, yielding ungodly sums of investment funds. But he also makes a point that they cannot go unchecked, that there need to be boundaries. He manages to raise hope without getting unrealistic or too idealistic. He stays real.

Missed opportunity?

I was hoping the book would broach the subject of deep fakes. I even thought it was going to happen, when a video of questionable origin is brought up. We are seeing AI generated videos of mind-bogging quality show up every day, created by people with little to no knowledge of the technology that enables it. So an AI startup with lots of money and talent could conceivably do even better.

But trying to influence a court with a generated video would be a reckless maneuver, possibly not worth the risk. So maybe that's why the story takes a different turn there. Still, I thought it would have been a great opportunity to highlight yet another issue.

Jack McEvoy

Journalist Jack McEvoy is my favorite Connelly character. He's easier to identify with than other characters from this author and his books are some of the best. But if you were hoping for another McEvoy story, then I need to disappoint you. This is very much a Lincoln Lawyer story, with McEvoy only playing a supporting role.

Recording

Unlike the Harry Bosch series, the Lincoln Lawyer books are still read by just one narrator. In the absence of a second main character that makes sense. And with Peter Giles doing the reading, there is really nothing more I could ask for.

His low, gravelly voice is very pleasant to listen to. Different characters all get their own voices which are consistent and exhibit little to no flaws across the entire book.

The recording is clear and crisp. Bring it all together and you have a masterclass in how to make an audiobook.

Who is it for?

This audiobook combines a great story with superb reading. If you know and like the works of Michael Connelly you won't de disappointed by this one. If you're a fan of the Lincoln Lawyer books in particular, you should not miss this one!

But there's more to this one. It focuses of an important and very timely issue. AI is changing our lives and we need to be careful with what we allow and where we draw our lines. Because of that, I recommend everyone listen to this book. It makes some great points.

 
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from Ernest Ortiz Writes Now

Thought I change things up a little bit. Why not? For a couple of months, my wife and I have been feeding our younger son baby food. It’s been a challenge.

Normally, I would write about this on my other blog, but it’s down for maintenance and revamping. Truthfully, I don’t know when I’ll bring it online again. All I know is that it will be used again in the unforeseen future in the off chance I go back to the workplace.

I discussed this new blog with family and friends so updating them isn’t a problem. But since my other blog is offline I’m wondering if I should write about being a stay-at-home dad, private investigator, and other topics. I don’t want to limit myself, but I don’t want to do the extra work of copying an article on this blog and pasting it to my other blog.

My best solution is to let the topics come out naturally on paper, type them on the WriteFreely app, and decide whether to publish or not. We’ll see.

Finally, my red Blackwing 746 pencil is about two more inches useable before I throw it into my tiny pencil collection. It’s been a great pencil, but I don’t plan on buying another one soon. And buying a box is out of the question. So what pencil should I use next?

Maybe I’ll use a Blackwing 602 from a box I bought at a discount. More on that later.

#writing #article #babyfood #pencil #privateinvestigator #stayathomedad

 
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from Faucet Repair

26 January 2026

Last night I reorganized a drawer of ephemera that had been piling up in since I moved into my new place. Noting some arrangements and encounters here. Print of the top of a silver spoon protruding from the opening of a Chinese New Year red envelope, which contained a plastic glow-in-the-dark star. On an envelope that contained a wedding invitation: an ink-stamped snowman overlapping a postage stamp with a pink begonia on it, the word “forever” arcing over the snowman's torso. Pink tissue paper cradling a neon-yellow tennis ball. A program from the Tate with some Cézanne apples on the cover partially obscured by a slightly blurry polaroid from Winchester of a black cat nestled into an angle made by two pieces of wood in the guardrail lattice of a wooden footbridge over the River Itchen.

 
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from The happy place

I’m thinking that I’ve been a dead fish floating downstream for a long time, but then suddenly I’ve come to life swimming upstream, unable to complain because no words come out of my fish lips, only bubbles, and suddenly I feel the strong current trying to drag me with it, but not me! I swim nimbly with muscular movements and lo and behold even I make it up this waterfall.

I know that that’s where the bears are, I’m not stupid. And yet these dangers must be faced, even though this is just a matter of luck, isn’t it?

It’s just a matter of luck. Being a fish in this example, is also just luck (or lack thereof)

The only real choice was coming alive swimming upstream

And for someone such as me, it wasn’t a choice at all!

 
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from Jodan/ZAI

The Creative Discipline Behind JZAI: Turning Vision Into Sound

In the world of independent hip hop, talent is only one part of the equation. What truly defines an artist over time is discipline, clarity of vision, and the ability to transform ideas into consistent creative output. The project behind JZAI is built on this principle: music is not just inspiration—it is structure, focus, and long-term commitment.

Behind every release, every concept, and every step forward, there is a process designed to turn creativity into something sustainable.

Creativity as a Daily Practice

Many people think creativity appears in moments of inspiration. In reality, for an independent artist, creativity is a habit. The work behind JZAI is based on the idea that artistic growth comes from repetition, observation, and constant refinement.

Writing lyrics is not only about expression, but about clarity of thought. Each idea is developed with intention, focusing on themes such as:

personal evolution

mental resilience

self-discipline

ambition and long-term thinking

navigating challenges with perspective

Instead of chasing trends or external expectations, the creative process starts internally. The goal is to produce music that feels honest, focused, and aligned with a consistent artistic direction.

From Concept to Track

Every song within the JZAI project begins with a concept. Sometimes it comes from a personal experience. Other times it comes from a mindset, a question, or a moment of reflection.

The process typically follows three stages:

  1. Idea development Defining the message or emotional tone behind the track.

  2. Writing and structure Building lyrics that balance storytelling, rhythm, and clarity.

  3. Sound direction Choosing production that supports the mood and reinforces the identity of the project.

This structured approach allows each release to feel intentional rather than improvised. Over time, it also helps build a recognizable sound and narrative style.

The Importance of Consistency

One of the biggest challenges for independent artists is consistency. Without the structure of a label or management team, progress depends entirely on personal discipline.

For JZAI, consistency means:

continuing to write, even without immediate releases

improving technical skills over time

maintaining a clear artistic direction

showing up regularly in the creative process

Growth in music rarely comes from sudden breakthroughs. It comes from steady effort and long-term focus.

Building Identity Through Sound

In today’s music landscape, listeners have access to unlimited content. What makes an artist stand out is not volume, but identity.

The sound behind JZAI is shaped by a few core principles:

emotional authenticity

modern but timeless production choices

balance between introspection and energy

coherence across releases

The objective is not to follow a single trend, but to develop a sound that evolves while remaining recognizable.

Identity is built track by track, decision by decision.

Independence as a Creative Advantage

Operating as an independent hip hop artist brings challenges, but it also creates opportunities. Without external pressure to follow commercial formulas, the project can grow at its own pace.

This independence allows:

full control over creative direction

flexibility in release strategy

freedom to experiment and refine

a stronger connection between artist and audience

For JZAI, independence is not a limitation—it is a foundation for authenticity and long-term sustainability.

The Role of Mindset

Behind the music, there is a strong focus on mindset. The philosophy of the project is based on a simple idea: growth happens through discipline, patience, and self-awareness.

This perspective influences both the creative process and the long-term strategy. Instead of measuring success only through numbers or short-term attention, the focus remains on:

improvement over time

building a solid body of work

developing a professional presence

creating lasting value

In a fast-moving industry, mindset often becomes the difference between temporary visibility and long-term progress.

Looking Forward

The JZAI project continues to evolve with a focus on sustainability and gradual expansion. Future steps include new releases, deeper sound development, and a stronger digital presence across platforms.

Each stage is part of a larger vision: building a career that grows steadily, without losing creative integrity.

Discipline, Vision, and Long-Term Growth

Hip hop has always been rooted in self-expression, but the modern independent landscape requires more than passion. It requires structure, consistency, and strategic thinking.

The work behind JZAI reflects that balance—creative freedom supported by discipline and long-term vision.

Because in independent music, success is not just about making noise.

It’s about building something that lasts.

 
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from Jodan/ZAI

Building an Independent Path in Hip Hop: The Vision Behind JZAI

In today’s music industry, being an independent artist is both an opportunity and a challenge. Technology has opened doors that didn’t exist before, but it has also created a highly competitive environment where visibility, consistency, and identity matter more than ever.

The project behind JZAI was born from a simple idea: create music that reflects real experiences, personal growth, and a long-term vision, without compromising authenticity.

This is not just about releasing songs. It’s about building something meaningful over time.

More Than Music: A Long-Term Mindset

For many artists, the focus is on quick exposure or viral moments. While visibility is important, the foundation of JZAI is different. The goal is to develop a sustainable career based on consistency, discipline, and identity.

Hip hop has always been a culture of expression and storytelling. For JZAI, music is a space to explore themes such as:

personal growth

resilience and mindset

self-awareness

ambition and purpose

the process of building something from the ground up

Each track is part of a larger journey, not just a standalone release.

The Power of Independence

Being an independent hip hop artist means taking responsibility for every aspect of the project. From writing and creative direction to branding and digital presence, independence requires more than talent—it requires strategy.

The decision to remain independent is intentional. It allows:

full creative control

a clear artistic identity

long-term flexibility

direct connection with listeners

In a world driven by trends, independence makes it possible to stay focused on authenticity rather than short-term attention.

Building a Digital Presence

Today, an artist’s career exists as much online as it does in the studio. Visibility is no longer limited to radio or traditional media. Platforms, portfolios, and digital publications play a critical role in shaping an artist’s reputation.

Part of the JZAI vision is to build a strong and consistent digital footprint that reflects professionalism and growth. This includes:

music distribution across streaming platforms

professional artist profiles and portfolios

written content that shares the vision behind the project

strategic online presence focused on long-term positioning

The goal is simple: when people search for JZAI, they find a clear, credible, and evolving artistic identity.

Authenticity in a Fast-Moving Industry

The modern music landscape moves fast. Trends come and go, sounds change, and attention spans are short. In that environment, the most valuable asset an artist can have is authenticity.

For JZAI, authenticity means:

writing from real experience

staying consistent with the artistic vision

avoiding shortcuts that compromise identity

focusing on growth instead of comparison

Success is not defined by a single moment, but by the ability to evolve while staying true to the original purpose.

Looking Ahead

The journey of JZAI is still in progress, and that’s exactly the point. The project is designed to grow step by step, with a focus on sustainability rather than speed.

Future plans include:

new music releases

expanded digital presence

collaborations with other artists and creators

reaching broader international audiences

Every step is part of a long-term strategy built around consistency, learning, and continuous improvement.

A Project Built to Last

Hip hop has always rewarded those who stay real and stay committed. The vision behind JZAI is grounded in that philosophy: build slowly, stay authentic, and let the work speak over time.

This is not about chasing trends. It’s about building a voice. A presence. A legacy.

And this is only the beginning.

 
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from 下川友

弁当クラブという部活動を、もう10年続けている。 とはいえ部員は2人だけで、高校のときに知り合った親友だ。

活動内容は、毎週土曜にそれぞれ弁当を作ってきて、公園にレジャーシートを広げ、互いの弁当を見せ合い、食べ合い、そして本気で評価し合うというものだった。

最初の頃は「正しい温度の弁当」という基準を作り、 「正しいそぼろ弁当」や「正しい唐揚げ弁当」を作っては、 うんうんと2人で満足げに頷いていた。 だが10年も続ければ、いつの間にか2人にしか良さが分からない創作弁当になっていた。

「ははは、海苔が襲いかかってきたぞ」なんて笑い合っていたとき、 野球ボールがコロコロと転がってきた。

「すいません!」と、小学生が走ってくる。 ボールを拾って投げ返すと、「それ、美味そうっすね」と言う。

「食べる?」とウインナーを分けてやると、 「めちゃ美味いっす!」と礼を言って、また練習に戻っていった。 最近の子にしては、こんな訳の分からない大人にビビらない、いい子だと思った。

翌週、また弁当を見せ合う日がやってきた。 弁当箱を開けた瞬間、俺は固まった。 あいつは、とんでもないものを作ってきたのだ。

たこさんウインナーだ。

「おいおい、これ絶対あの子に食べさせたいだけだろ」と俺が言うと、 「いや別に」とそっけなく返される。

「俺とお前だけの時間だろ、これは。 これからも、俺とお前だけが喜ぶ弁当を作ろうぜ」と言うと、 あいつは少し黙ってから言った。

「実はな……1年くらい前から、人に食べてほしい弁当を作りたいって思うようになってたんだ」

なんともくだらない。 人が食べるための弁当だって? 弁当のための弁当を作れよ、と心の中で思ったが、 自分でも変なことを言っている自覚があったので、強くは言えなかった。

その日は結局、あの子は来なかった。 不貞腐れながら帰ろうとしたとき、 「来週もやるよな?」とあいつが言う。

「……別にやるけど」と、不機嫌なまま返事をして、その日は終わった。

 
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from Attronarch's Athenaeum

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