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Storytime!
Storytime! I was at the Rifftrax Screening of Space Mutiny but they were showing promos of other fathom events including screening of Rebel Without a Cause which James Dean cried out, “You’re taking me apart!” Which I yelled out in the theater a nanosecond later, “LISA!!” I made the entire theater laughed and cheered because they know The Disaster Artist and The Room.
#rifftraxlive #spacemutiny #rifftrax
(at Deer Valley AMC Theater)
#tbt a view of Seattle including the Safeco Stadium. I miss going to the city dearly and I want to go back. #seattle #washington #city #travel #doctorjoseprizalpark #drjoseprizalpark #park #safecofield #pacificnorthwest (at Doctor Jose P. Rizal Park)
“The camera adds 10 pounds” is a phrase of the past. Now people look better in their pictures than they do in person
When people say that the camera adds ten pounds it’s because cameras used in filmmaking/TV production have a wider focal length and therefore subjects look wider or bigger. Whereas cellphone cameras have a short focal length that makes subjects appear thinner or smaller.
Nowadays, with DSLR’s and a variety of lenses, we are able to depict a wide range of focal lengths by using one kind of camera.
So that is why most people on social media may seem to look thinner than they do in person (especially in selfies because the front facing camera on phones especially have short focal lengths).
And that is also how the phrase “the camera adds ten pounds” came about.