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I Am Your Father!



On May 21st, 1980, the second film in the epic space opera series Star Wars was released, featuring a scene in which the antagonist Darth Vader reveals himself as Luke Skywalker's father in an attempt to manipulate him into betraying his comrades (shown below).




I am your father!




On January 12th, 2006, Urban Dictionary[2] user Luke D. Lorenz submitted an entry for "I am your father," citing the "Star Wars film as the origin of the phrase. On February 14th, 2007, YouTuber Jimmania07 uploaded a video titled "Vader Makes Fun of Luke," featuring the audio from Vader's infamous "No!" clip in the film Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith (shown below, left). In the next seven years, the video gained more than 2.39 million views and 3,900 comments. On May 2nd, YouTuber REALchexy94 uploaded an edited clip of the Star Wars scene with the word "mother" substituted for "father" (shown below, right), which was poorly received by the YouTube community earning over 9,000 down votes within the first six years.


On May 9th, 2008, the single-serving site No I Am Your Father[4] was launched, featuring various translations of the Vader quote, including 1337 Speak, morse code and binary ASCII. On May 11th, 2009, The Guardian[5] published an article identifying the line "Luke, I am your father" as a pervasive misquotation. On October 2nd, 2011, YouTuber bashthemonkey uploaded a recording of a 4-year-old reacting to the pivotal Star Wars scene (shown below), accumulating upwards of 3.97 million views and 4,800 comments in the following two years. On January 2nd, 2012, "Luke, I am your father" was added to Wikipedia's "List of misquotations" page.[3]


You must have heard the famous phrase attributed to Darth Vader in Episode V of the Star Wars saga, revealing to Luke Skywalker that he was his father: "Luke, I am your father." However, the fact is that this phrase was never said in this way. From a quick search on YouTube, it is possible to find the original scene of the film, in which it is possible to observe that the phrase spoken by Darth Vader, in fact, is: No, I am your father." This is not an isolated example. Another case is found in the animated movie Snow White. Some people imagine that the phrase spoken by the Queen when talking to her mirror begins with the expression: "Mirror, mirror" when, in fact, in the 1937 Disney movie, the phrase uttered by the Queen begins, "Magic mirror on the wall."


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This is not the quote you are looking for. Believe it or not, this is a misquote. Darth Vader never actually says "Luke, I am your father." One of the most famous pop culture quotes of all time must be the result of a mass Jedi mind trick.


In The Empire Strikes Back (aka "the good one") Darth Vader hacks off Luke Skywalker's hand, then drops a Force bomb: "I am your father." He doesn't say "Luke" beforehand, though. Before-HAND! Ha. #sorrynotsorry, Luke.


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The perfect Father's Day or new-parent gift for your long-lost father, adoptive family, or Jedi Master, Star Wars: I Am Your Father is a lighthearted guide to parenting, featuring quotes, classic moments, and characters from the Star Wars galaxy.[1]


In the UK women can be female parents: since 2008, this is the term used to denote the relation to the child of the same-sex partner of an IVF birth mother. The associations between woman parent/mother and male parent/father are therefore not necessarily reflected in the law.


Rodel Gonzalez is an artist of inspirational talents with a keen eye for seeing the beauty in the commonplace and grace in the ordinary. His story starts with an initiation into the art business through the tutelage of his father, Rick Gonzalez and grandfather, Felix Gonzalez, at the age of 9. "Growing up my father would always tells me to not be intimidated by the paint and be 100% sure about my intentions on my first stroke at the canvas, says Rodel. His explorations of color, form, and composition ignited a lifelong passion for the arts in its many forms.


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In 1980, The Empire Strikes Back revealed that Darth Vader was Luke's father, a twist that has become one of the most iconic or shocking movie moments to that time in movie history. It is one IMHO of the best movies in the Star Wars franchise of all time.


Elasticsearch is not a relational database. If you come from relational databases or SQL background, you need to change your thought process for modelling data concerning Elasticsearch. In SQL, you typically normalise your data. Elasticsearch is about search. Search requires different considerations. In Elasticsearch, you typically denormalise your data!


As long as you understand the tradeoffs of each technique, there's no difficulty to use it. We are going to look in detail about the parent-child relationship or in-depth grandparents and grandchildren. Sometimes relationships matter. It depends on your case.


The only case where the parent-child relationship makes sense is if your data contains a one-to-many relationship where one entity significantly outnumbers the other entity. The song (parent) won't change, but the likes (children) for that song may grow steadily.


Using parent-child relationships in Elasticsearch is an advanced method. Use it only when needed. A parent-child relationship searches slower and has more needs for system resources. If you can, always upgrade at least to Version 5.6 - otherwise, your implementation will and upgrade to Version 6 breaks. Avoid multiple mapping types if you can. The time you invest now is handsomely rewarded in the future; otherwise, anticipate a major migration or upgrade challenge. One possible outcome could be to stay on the specific Elasticsearch version, which is IMHO unwise.


Research in life-course criminology has been studying turning points away from criminality. There is although a limited amount of research that has been focusing on parenthood and especially on fatherhood as a potential turning point. The available studies show mixed results in this topic and the findings suggest that there are factors that can both form and restrict fatherhood as a potential turning point towards desistance. The aim for the present thesis is therefore to get a better understanding of fatherhood as a potential turning point from persistent offending and to examine the role and meaning of fatherhood in the criminal careers of Swedish former criminals. Qualitative method in the form of retrospective semi- structured interviews has been used to collect data and five former offenders that became fathers during their criminal career participated in the study. The data have been analysed with systematic text condensation and the results indicate that the men did not desist after becoming fathers. They did however have both intended and unintended breaks from criminality when their child was born, but the criminal lifestyle was their first choice and their children were put on the second place. Relationships to friends and in some cases to the mother of the child was a restricting factor for fatherhood to become a turning point. Another factor that restricted fatherhood from being a potential turning point was human agency. The men concluded that an offending father can not receive help from society if there is no will for the father to desist.


Listen to me, girls. I am your father! (パパのいうことを聞きなさい! Papa no Iu Koto o Kikinasai!?), also known as PapaKiki! (パパ聞き!?) for short, is a Japanese light novel series written by Tomohiro Matsu and illustrated by Yuka Nakajima. The first volume was published by Shueisha under their Super Dash Bunko imprint December 2009; as of September 2011, nine volumes have been released. A manga adaptation drawn by Yōhei Takemura started serialization in the September 2011 issue of Jump Square. An anime television adaptation started airing in January 2012. 2ff7e9595c


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