not sure what you were trying to accomplish with these responses but for future reference spamming meme ascii art and bringing up yet more racial stereotypes for seemingly no reason isn't the best strategy. we're done here
for onlookers, before he edited his message he originally admitted he was trolling. don't need people like that here
people always act like their kick/ban was solely because of the most recent thing they did, when it's a combination of everything else they did leading up to it. sure, part of your kick was because of your username, but also earlier that day you had posted a racist message:
and then after mal asked you to stop being racist, you went back and edited your message to be MORE racist:
this also comes after fucking months of you skirting the rules by constantly linking videos from horrible people like thequartering and then when anyone called you out on it you'd be like "You can't talk about politics here." stop trying to gain sympathy here keaton, it isn't going to work
For future reference, here is a table of supported sites to embed videos from, with the text in the "Service name(s)" column being what you put in the LMW video template in place of "youtube": www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Extension:EmbedVideo#Supported_services
The rule is no dubs outside of ENGLISH ones, not specifically American ones. Also, dubs in the original language are allowed.
Albanian Spongebob isn't fake, it just doesn't meet the guidelines and became a meme because of someone who tried to force interest in it to an extreme degree a few years ago (he didn't even speak Albanian). The reason the dub rule was added was because dub articles were flooding the site before that which were mostly written by a few users and of dubious quality and notability
As some of you noticed, the 44-page-long clock man search thread has gone missing recently. The irony of this is not lost on us. One of the staff members accidentally deleted the thread while trying to delete a spam message within it. Unfortunately, ProBoards does not have the functionality to restore threads, and when we asked their support team they told us there was nothing they can do.
HOWEVER, I've compiled archives of all 44 pages through Bing and Google's caches (honestly mostly Bing, they don't update their cache as much so they had far more of the pages still saved for the brief time being).
Here is an offline archive in a .zip file: archive.org/details/clockman_202007 (unzip everything into the same folder, and then use the .html files to open each page)
It's not ideal, I know, but I hope this makes it up to all of you. This mistake will never happen again.
If you're wondering why I used archive.is instead of archive.org for the online backups, a couple reasons: 1. In my experiences it's faster. Not knocking IA, given they're hosting over 40 petabytes of data they have every reason to run a little slow, but this was time-sensitive before these caches expired so any time I could save was worth it. 2. Back when I tried to archive a bunch of IMDb message board threads, I did them on the wayback machine, and then due to robots.txt (i presume) they all broke right after the forums went down. Archive.is isn't at the mercy of robots.txt, so it seemed safer in the theoretical event that ProBoards ever decides to disallow archives.