One day I got a targeted ad in my phone notifications from Shopee -- Indonesian
Amazon, more or less. It was for a 1080p smart projector for $20. Never did I
think a projector was something I needed before, as I have a 43" TV with a
Slackware media PC at an appropriate distance away from my couch. But then...
the cheap refurb media PC gave up the ghost. And I thought back to a friend in
my old artist community housing that had a projector that worked amazingly well.

My wife's asthma has been acting up bad lately as she has a case of pneumonia,
which also means we're spending a lot more time in our bedroom, where the air
purifier lives. On an impulse I told wife we were getting a projector. It was
only $20 so what did we have to lose?
As much as I'd love to link to or name the specific model I purchased, an image
of the model is as close as I can come -- it's a generic Chinese unbranded smart
projector.
It came in the mail shortly after I ordered it with a power cord and HDMI cable.
There are slots in the back for AUX audio and USB as well. I set it up on a
dresser and pointed it at a wall. Then I registered a throwaway Google account
on it and grabbed Jellyfin from the play store, and connected it to my regular
workhouse computer via the process discussed here.
I'm generally adverse to "smart TVs" but if they can run Jellyfish or Kodi, have
Google Play store, or have HDMI/USB it checks the boxes for me.

Huge success! We can watch high resolution videos at a width of ~140cm in our
bedroom, in bed. As long as it's dark and we use an external speaker -- there's no
complaints about this setup. If it were a $100 projector I'd have been hesitant
to purchase it and I would have never considered any projector much more than
that. But for now, the $20 projector is working very well. The colors pop. The
software is enough to get the job done. If and when it dies, I'll drop an update.
This is the album that everyone that's anyone is talking about. I'm someone so
that means I'm talking about it, too.

Where to begin? This album is a bit... unconventional. With all the slurring
and broken, repeated fragments, the vibe I pick up off this is something of a
drunk musician friend, 2 or 3 drinks too many, half-consciously trying to put
out some songs.
And I don't mean that in a negative way! There is a lot of raw emotion coming
out here, even if the stanzas can be pretty out-there and fractured. Anxiety,
dread, guilt, blame, and nostalgia all come out here.
Another way I'd look at the lyrics: this is something of a stealth punk album
satirizing pop music. It's punk in that the attitude has anti-establishment
trends and there's a rudeness that pokes through, and tracks like Cobra that
sound lyrically poppy really aren't. The backing is not what we'd call punk
but this is an albm that's hard to put into boxes.
The first time I listened to this album, I didn't like it. I really didn't like
the first track. But I gave it the attention it deserved until something
clicked, and now I think it's a pretty good album. Getting Killed is worth
experiencing. Give it a listen!