Showing posts with label marilyn cornwell photographer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label marilyn cornwell photographer. Show all posts

Sunday, June 2, 2019

Yo-yoing and Juggling

Are yo-yos gone or in steep decline?  There is a national yo-yo day in June and I wonder if it will be celebrated.  It is an ancient game - the Greeks had yo-yos - a child playing with one is depicted on a terracotta vase.  Before the twentieth century, they were referred to as bandalores. 

Yo-yos were extremely popular in the 1950s and 1960s.   Today there are associations and conventions, so the professionalism is well-developed.  The world yo-yo contest will be in Cleveland in August 2019.  The competition circuit has 33 countries involved - competitors travel around the world.  

What sports are similar to it?  Are yo-yo skills like juggling skills?  There is an International Jugglers' Association with the IJA Festival coming up at the end of June and the convention will be in Fort Wayne, Indiana.  It started out at an International Brotherhood of Magicians convention in Pittsburgh in 1947. 


There are lots of programs to train for yo-yoing and for juggling.  But I still wonder how many people are active yo-yoers.  On the other hand, juggling has some statistics.  One of them is that it is estimated that 21 percent of people can juggle.  There is a chart on reddit where someone had fun with estimating how many balls could be juggled by the population:

Balls People 
3 200M 
4 5M 
5 500K 
6 50K 
7 10K 
8 1K 
9 200 
10 40 
11 10 
12 2

Busker Festivals have both yo-yoers and jugglers.  At last year's Toronto International BuskerFest, they had the Guinness World Record attempt for yo-yoing by Michael Francis. His website doesn't have a further reference that he broke the record, but he has two Guinness world records, including the coin rolling record in 2016.  

June is the month of sweet smells.  Lily of the Valley, Lilac and Wisteria scents float through the neighbourhood this weekend.



 

Saturday, June 1, 2019

According to one survey, May is considered the favourite month of the year, October second.  June and December that are tied for third.  With our cool spring, June will be on top this year for us.  So as we launch into our favourite month, I went looking for crazy and strange business, retail and company names.  Here are just three:

Analtech
Where it's located: Newark, Delaware
What it does: Manufacturer of thin layer chromatography plates.
How it got its name:Portmanteau of the words "analytical" and "technology."
About: Analtech distributes its products to more than 40 countries and 6 continents.

McJunkin
Where it's located: Charleston, West Virginia
What it does: Manufacturer of pipes and valves.
How it got its name: Jerry McJunkin was the original co-founder of McJunkin Supply Company in 1921.
About:McJunkin Red Man employees around 3450 people and and is #493 on the Fortune 500.

Ass Compact
Where it's located: Germany
What it does: Specialist magazine for Capital and Risk Management
How it got its name: This one is anyone's guess. 

The rest of the companies are HERE.  

There are many articles on this topic.  A picture tour of oddly named business and companies is HERE.  This article has Butt Drilling, Wally's Private Parts, Turd Baby, My Dung, Big Dick's Halfway Inn, AssCompact (see above), Glory Hole Center, Anal Jewelry Center, Beaver Cleaners, The Golden Shower Restaurant, and so on. 

Huffington Post took on the challenge and found Goin' Postal.  It is followed by a restaurant with the name of Sam and Ella's.  How about Passmore Gas & Propane? 

Even the websites themselves have crazy names - at chive.com they showed these pictures of business names: Mustard's last stand, British Hairways, Lettuce Eat, Juan in a Million, Lord of the Fries, and so on. Another site named Pleated-jeans.com had Jurassic Pork, Surelock Homes, Carl's Pane in the Glass - all as picture stories. 

What if you want to create a crazy business name?, I found biznamewiz.com and  typed in my name to get over 15,000 whacky combinations such as:

Marilyn Crispy
Cornwell Aristotle
Cornwell Behold
Marilyn Craze
Marilyn Sixth Man

Our pictures today show the interesting flowers of Anthurium, blooming at Longwood Gardens.





Thursday, May 30, 2019

Around the World of Last Names

If you go through the alphabet and come up with a last name for every letter...

You would likely discover your country of origin and ethnicity.  The list of common surnames is organized by region - Asia, Europe, North America, Oceania and South America.  

And within each category is a listing of the most common names by country.  How many people in China have the name Wang/Wong?  In 2007 there were 92,881,000. In comparison, there are 2,376,207 people with the surname Smith in the U.S.A. in 2000. 

Smith turns out to be the most popular last name in the U.S., Australia, and Great Britain, along with many English-speaking countries.  The last name of Wang means "king" in China.  That can be traced back to royal families who took the name of Wang when their kingdoms fell under the Qin dynasty.  The second most popular name in China is Li, and it means plum, plum tree or minister.  It became a popular name as a result of 'gifting' the name Li to trusted allies and warriors.  The practice of surname-gifting resulted in nearly 40% of Chinese people having the surnames Wang, Li, Zhang, Liu, Chen, Yang, Huang, Zhao, Zhou, and Wu.

I found a visual version of surnames - a map that shows the most common last name in every country.  Here it is.
 



What would you guess about surnames in the Arctic and Antarctica?  They are complicated jurisdictions.  In the Canadian Arctic, Innuit surnames were ignored with the government using a number system for people. It finally registered surnames starting in the 1960s.   I found no listings of common Innuit names.

What about Antarctica? Only 80 people live in Antartica in the winter and 200 in the summer.  They live on King Georges Island.   How many people have been born there?  Wikipedia says at least 11 children have been born in West Antarctica.  These children are automatically the same citizens as their parents, accounting for their surnames.

Here are some of the ferns along the living wall at Longwood Gardens.


 




 

Wednesday, May 29, 2019

Pacific Fog and Pizza

I looked at the water level of Lake Ontario yesterday and it is high this year.  The reports are that it is higher than in 2017, which was a record year.  That made some of the beaches off-limits along the Niagara shores of Lake Ontario in 2017.

We had mist come in from the escarpment yesterday along with cool temperatures, and one could imagine it was a San Francisco day. It is being repeated this morning.  We in Grimsby are getting a small experience of what it is like in San Francisco.

What makes fog a common occurrence along the pacific coastline? The temperature of the Pacific Ocean means there is a lot of evaporated moisture.  There is a marine layer of water vapour near the surface and this encounters the colder waters along the coast.  The result is fog. There are aerial pictures of fog entering San Francisco through the Golden Gate - a fascinating weather story.   


What I notice this morning, beyond the weather, is that one of the headlines is about Pizza Pizza.  It changed its original pan recipe after four decades.  This was reported by CNN.  It has a new cheese blend, new sauce and is baked in a newly engineered pan designed to turn out a crispier crust.  Meanwhile, the news at Little Caesars Pizza is that vegan sausage has made its appearance in the Impossible Supreme Pizza.  What makes this national news? Maybe this is because 43% of consumers order at pizza at least once a week.  And don't forget the keto diet where cauliflower pizza crusts are on the rise. This is also a news item.

Here's the beehive gazebo at Winterthur, with the peonies in the foreground.

 
 

Tuesday, May 28, 2019

Peony Flower Crops

Brian's Lilycrest Gardens hybridizing field is at the Houtby Farm, a grower of pussy willows, peonies and gladiolus.  This field, below, shows the Styer's Peony Festival At their Chadd's Ford Nursery when we were visiting on Victoria Day weekend.  We saw the signs, so followed them to the growing field with thousands of plants and flowers in bloom. The celebration tent is in the top left, so you can see how large the field is.  There are over 100 varieties on over 25 acres.  Styer's have seven farms, and originated with botanist J. Franklin Styer, a Pennsylvania Quaker. He was a pioneer in hybridizing and propagating peonies. His father is credited with bringing the mushroom industry to Kennett Square, where Longwood is located. 

What made me surprised?  As a cut flower farm, I could see lots of flowers blooming.  I don't get to see that many flowers in the Houtby fields. While one can see some peonies in bloom in the rows, they mostly are picked at the right bud stage, and then placed into cold storage.  Peonies last in cold storage until August - they are a prime wedding flower.  The Gladiolus crop hardly ever has colour in the field - they are picked as soon as the smallest hint of colour shows.

Like many things, the floral industry is now global.  In the past, roses were grown in greenhouses in Niagara as flowers were grown locally, near their markets. Now roses are grown in Ecuador and Colombia.  Colombia accounts for almost 60% of all flowers imported to the U.S.A.  The Netherlands is losing ground as the centre of production for the European floral market. However, it remains the leader in hybridization and culture, and technology advances come from the Netherlands for the greenhouse growers.  
 
 






Sunday, May 26, 2019

May 26 - Roadmapping

What do you think of this roadmap of American living?  In my work, strategic roadmaps helped organizations transition and transform.  This one is a current state map that contrasts the political and social status of the U.S.
 
There is a wide spectrum of visual representations, aka maps, now.   We can go to visual complexity.com and find all kinds of projects.  I looked for ones that might reveal things about U.S. politics but didn't see anything that general.  What I did find was a diverse collection of visual representations.  Every one of these pictures expands and shows the results of analysis through visual representation.  You can read about the project and author HERE

Here is the author's introduction: VisualComplexity.com intends to be a unified resource space for anyone interested in the visualization of complex networks. The project's main goal is to leverage a critical understanding of different visualization methods, across a series of disciplines, as diverse as Biology, Social Networks or the World Wide Web. I truly hope this space can inspire, motivate and enlighten any person doing research on this field.
 




We found these two historic stone buildings in Delaware, near Mount Cuba.
 


 

Saturday, May 25, 2019

May 25 - Left and Right

Left and Right have been hijacked in Google and now retrieve left and right wing politics. One has to look for relative direction to find left and right.   I repeated the search and there's some 'smarts' in Google that now retrieves both concepts.  I knew they were watching me.

So in relation to my question about direction, Wikipedia says that: "In situations where a common frame of reference is needed, it is common to use an egocentric view."  I had thought of left and right simply.  I find there are many paragraphs in Wikipedia on this. 
  
I was drawn to the paragraph on Geometry of the natural environment:
"The right-hand rule is one common way to relate the three principal directions. For many years a fundamental question in physics was whether a left-hand rule would be equivalent. Many natural structures, including human bodies, follow a certain "handedness", but it was widely assumed that nature did not distinguish the two possibilities. This changed with the discovery of parity violations in particle physics. If a sample of cobalt-60 atoms is magnetized so that they spin counterclockwise around some axis, the beta radiation resulting from their nuclear decay will be preferentially directed opposite that axis. Since counter-clockwise may be defined in terms of up, forward, and right, this experiment unambiguously differentiates left from right using only natural elements: if they were reversed, or the atoms spun clockwise, the radiation would follow the spin axis instead of being opposite to it."

This means there is proof of the right-hand rule in nature. There are human cultures with no words denoting the egocentric directions. We use backwards, forwards, up, down and left, right.  They might say "move a bit to the east".  

Betterphoto tells me that one of my images won second place in the landscape category.  Here it is - a picture from Winterthur a few years ago.  No azaleas blooming so beautifully this year.






 

Friday, May 24, 2019

May 24 - Dog Tails Know

I am wondering about dog tails, and find these are the four questions that google has showcased:

Do dog tails help them balance?
How do tails help dogs?
Do dogs have feelings in the tails?
Do dogs know they have tails?

These are hilarious questions. 


First the final question's answer:  Here are a few reasons dogs chase their tails... Oftentimes, dogs will chase their tails because they are a bit bored; it's a way for them to have fun and expend some energy. This is especially true for puppies, who may not even realize that their tail is actually a part of their body, but see it as a toy.

Balance: Some do, some don't. However, while most dogs technically don't need their tails for balance, some rely on them to do their jobs. Working dogs are often bred to use their tails when performing certain tasks, and in some breeds, that means carefully maintaining balance while performing their particular job.

How to tails help dogs? For the most part, canines and felines use their tails to communicate — from the wide, sweeping wag of a happy dog to the quick tail swish of an annoyed cat. In canines, a tail may also serve as a type of rudder to help stabilize dogs in the water. 


 
Here are the other questions from Google.  I must make a side-comment on Google's "grammarisms" such as "? ..." Who decided that?

Here are our questions:
  • Why do dogs lick people? ... 
  • Why is my dog's nose always wet? ... 
  • How much better is a dog's sense of smell than our own? ... 
  • Why do dog feet smell like corn chips? ... 
  • Is my dog's mouth really that clean? ... 
  • Are pit bulls actually dangerous? ... 
  • Do dogs get jealous? ... 
  • Who cleans up after guide dogs?
Our concluding jokes:

Where does a dog get a new tail?
At the retail store

I just watched my dog chase his tail for ten minutes, and I thought to myself: "Wow, dogs are easily entertained." Then I realized: I just watched my dog chase his tail for ten minutes.
Q: How is a dog and a marine biologist alike?
A: One wags a tail and the other tags a whale.

A country road in Delaware.


Thursday, May 23, 2019

Feng Shui That

What about feng shui and house shapes?  What is a bagu map?  I find out it is the feng shui energy map of your space and that it is one of the Five Arts of Chinese Metaphysics.  It discusses architecture in terms of invisible forces that bind the universe, earth, and humanity together, known as qi.  It is an ancient tradition.

What about contemporary uses of feng shui?

I found a Forbes article titled "Feng Shui Your Money".  It isn't really about feng shui - it is a catchy title.

How about this article:  
"Should You Feng Shui Your Hair?" - this is also in Forbes.  It is about Feng Shui Beauty techniques. A person's energy is analyzed and hair, colour and make-up are customized to reflect it.

And another Forbes article about a lady who sells plants based on feng shui.  She has sold over 1500 on the Facebook Marketplace. She imparts feng shui and plant-rearing wisdom to the purchasers.

Forbes has many articles on Feng Shui.  Here are a few more titles: 
  • Desk for Success
  • Attract Clients
  • Giving Your Car's Feng Shui a Tune-Up
  • Feng Shui for your portfolio
  • A Healthy office a healthy mind
Of course, here's the headline that draws attention:  Meet Donal Trump's feng shui master - The article is HERE.  She did the work in 1995 on the Trump International Hotel and Tower.  The common element in all these articles is how someone gained celebrity or wealth through the application of feng shui to their professional area.  Most interesting.

Our picture today was taken at the 13th Street Winery in St. Catharines.  It is on the garden tour this weekend.

Wednesday, May 22, 2019

May 22 - Please the Fans Finale

The Elevator mystery is unsolved after almost 300 episodes, but the ding of its arrival is a completion for the Big Bang Theory. Once that door opened, the series was allowed to complete.  I had not realized that the most enduring question is Penny's surname.  It remains a mystery.  The show seemed to have a traditional set of resolutions, the highlight being Sheldon finding grace.  

I saw part of an episode of the Lucy Show a few weeks ago. The finale of The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour mirrored their real-life circumstances - Wikipedia says it wasn't intentional. In the show Lucy and Ricky were about to divorce and end the show. Edie Adams was the guest star and chose the song to sing without knowing the plot - "That's All".  It is considered prophetic. While the show's finale divorce didn't happen, their real-life divorce was final and they only reconciled many years later.

Viewership of finales is very important. The BBT viewership 'grew' to 23.44 million viewers, up from the 18 million who watched it live.  This makes it the most watched non-sports series program of 2018-19.  But it falls far short of the most watched television series finales of all time:
  1. M*A*S*H // 1983. 105.9 million viewers
  2. Cheers // 1993. 80.4 million
  3. The Fugitive // 1967. 78 million
  4. Seinfeld // 1998. 76.3 million
  5. Friends // 2004. 52.5
  6. Magnum, P.I. // 1988. 50.7
  7. The Cosby Show // 1992. 44.4
  8. All in the Family // 1979. 40.2
  9. Family ties // 1989. 36.3 
  10. Home Improvement //1999. 35.5 million
Can you imagine these numbers?  The M*A*S*H episode drew 77% of those watching televisions at the time. Only the 2010's Super Bowl XLIV had 106 million viewers. The Cheers episode was watched by between 80.4 million and 93.5 million, with the rise of cable television.

We look at a Miltonia orchid today.  Also known as the Pansy Orchid.



 

Friday, May 17, 2019

May 17 - Dandelion Futures Up

We've heard a lot 'about trade with China'.  I realize I don't know anything other than the headlines. 

In the China news was the death of I M Pei, the designer of the glass pyramid at the Louvre.  He was 102 years old.  The BBC article shows his most famous work HERE.  He was immensely prolific, and known for many works in the US and around the world. While he was a resident of the U.S., China celebrated his legacy there.  Some of his work, like the glass pyramid at the Louvre, had negative reactions initially.  That was the case of the Bank of China Tower - it is now described as the world's best bank building.

Look at the field of gold in front of the expansive orchards of Cherry Lane on Victoria Street in Vineland.  It is one of the few streets that trucks can take to get over the escarpment.  


Thursday, May 16, 2019

May 16 - If you own a computer then play this game for 1 minute

Isn't that headline interesting?  Could you read the headline without being at a computer.   How does owning a computer change whether you should play "the game" or not? I wonder about how that logic motivates people to click the link.

What would we do to improve our logic skills?  There are serious websites such as mentalup.com and they have three categories:  logical reasoning and planning, spatial perception and logical thinking, and logical and mathematical thinking skills.  They are targeted to children to engage in the 'games' to improve their skills.  Another site - the one that is the top item on the google list identified ten creative tips, and then shows six.   This six seem hilariously illogical - and perhaps an excellent example of how google's focus on revenues have interfered with retrieval results:
  1. Dance Your Heart Out. ... 
  2. Work out Your Brain with Logic Puzzles or Games. ... 
  3. Get a Good Night's Sleep. ... 
  4. Work out to Some Tunes. ... 
  5. Keep an “Idea Journal” with You. ... 
  6. Participate in Yoga.
The list made me laugh, so I went on to find a logic joke:

Jean-Paul Sartre is sitting at a French cafe, revising his draft of 'Being and Nothingness'.
He says to the waitress, "I'd like a cup of coffee, please, with no cream."
The waitress replies, "I'm sorry, monsieur, but we're out of cream. How about with no milk?"

The joke is followed by a list of Oxymorons.  It seems that seeing them together makes them more funny.
  1. Act naturally
  2. Almost exactly
  3. Alone together
  4. Business ethics
  5. Clearly misunderstood
  6. Computer security
  7. Diet ice cream
  8. Exact estimate
  9. Found missing
  10. Genuine imitation
  11. Good grief
  12. New classic
Two images of iconic Niagara - Peninsula Ridge Winery and orchard blossoms.



Tuesday, May 14, 2019

May 14 - A big amygdala

Today we continue to look into the rancid yet riveting world of disgustologists.  What are they studying? They are studying part of our body - our brain's amygdala.  The bigger it is, the more likely a person is to be conservative.

The field has determined that there are 6 categories of disgust:
  • poor hygiene  (snotty tissues, body odour, a dirty apartment bathroom)
  • animals and pests (cockroaches, rats, infestations)
  • sexual behaviour (prostitution, promiscuity)
  • irregular or strange appearances (obesity, disfigured faces, amputated body parts, poverty, wheezy breathing)
  • lesions or visible signs of infection 
  • rotting or decaying food
They are described in detail in this Popular Science article HERE.  The article summarize it in a nutshell:  'that feeling when someone you find sexually revolting offers you a stinky pizza".

In the studies, one of the aspects that is observed is horripilation.  That word means the erection of hairs on the skin due to cold, fear, or excitement, "a horripilation of dread tingled down my spine"


Is it all physiology and genes or is there socialization involved?  Michael de Barra, the research psychologist who defined these six categories says this:  Genes might decide what kills us and what doesn’t, but it’s through our interactions with the environment and with other people that we learn how to calibrate and adjust to our surroundings. So while the six categories might broadly encompass most disgusting things, there will still be intense variability depending on who you’re talking to and what they’re background might be.

Here's a great quote to help us understand why this is so fascinating for scientists:  "Disgust is an organ – like an eye or an ear. It has a purpose, it's there for a reason," said self-described "disgustologist" Valerie Curtis"Just like a leg gets you from A to B, disgust tells you which things you are safe to pick up and which things you shouldn't touch.

And this book:  This Is Your Brain on Parasites: How Tiny Creatures Manipulate Our Behaviour and Shape Society
by .  
Based on a wildly popular Atlantic  article, this is an astonishing investigation into the world of microbes, and the myriad ways they control how other creatures — including humans — act, feel, and think.  "Our obsession with cleanliness and our experience of disgust are both evolutionary tools for avoiding infection, but they evolved differently for different populations. Political, social, and religious differences among societies may be caused, in part, by the different parasites that prey on us."

So let's take an informal disgustology test?  What is the subject of this abstract picture?


It is a close-up of a person's beard.  Here he is.  What is your reaction?
 

Monday, May 13, 2019

Got my PHD in Disgustology

CBC Radio presents such fascinating stories.  On Saturday, they related research that show liberal and conservative thinking and emotions are fundamentally different and are wired in the brain. They can predict from people's physical sensitivity to disgust whether they are liberal or conservative.  The differences are so pronounced that there are standard traits on each side.  This area of research and study is now termed disgustology.

What the Scientific American article says: 

"According to the experts who study political leanings, liberals and conservatives do not just see things differently. They are different—in their personalities and even their unconscious reactions to the world around them. For example, in a study published in January, a team led by psychologist Michael Dodd and political scientist John Hibbing of the University of Nebraska–Lincoln found that when viewing a collage of photographs, conservatives' eyes unconsciously lingered 15 percent longer on repellent images, such as car wrecks and excrement—suggesting that conservatives are more attuned than liberals to assessing potential threats."

Conservatives are more fundamentally anxious than liberals. There is a high level of sensitivity for disgust among conservatives.  Studies show it extends into taste and smell, what people prefer to eat, how sensitive they are to bitter tastes, and more.

Researchers now have theories of how disgust is associated with views on transgender rights, immigration, and similar topics. "At a deep, symbolic level, some speculate, disgust may be bound up with ideas about “them” versus “us,” about whom we instinctively trust and don’t trust. In short, this research may help illuminate one factor—among many—that underlies why those on the left and the right can so vehemently disagree."

The tweet by right-wing Brazil president Jair Bolsonaro draws on the area of disgust.  He tweeted out a short clip of two 'perverts' gallivanting on a balcony at Rio's Carnival...He trolled the Left into defending an act that most people understandably find revolting (peeing on someone).

So here's our train picture of the day demonstrating the disgust factor with a well-known expression that originated in Scotland.


 

Saturday, May 11, 2019

Expressions We Know

There are expressions that never die out.  The top expression at eslbuzz.com is:

1. I'd better get on my horse.  This is an expression I've never heard anyone say.  So as number 1 in the list, the my 'take-away' is that this is a very old list. These are expressions from my childhood...
2. Break a leg!  Good luck! (Usually said to someone who is going to appear in front of an audience.)
3. Dig in!  You can start eating your meal.
4. Bite your tongue!  Keep quiet!
5. Butt out!  Go away and mind your own business!
6. By the skin of my teeth.  Only just.
7. Beats me. I don’t know.
8. Drop me a line.  Write me (a letter).

What about current jargon?  I found a list that looks more current at babble.com by JOHN-ERIK JORDAN
21. What’s up? / Wassup? / ‘sup?
Meaning: “Hello, how are you?”
No matter what you learned in English lessons, do not greet a friend or acquaintance with, “How do you do?” What’s up? or the even more informal ‘sup? mean the same thing without making you sound like you should be doffing a top hat. In more formal situations, it’s better to say, “Nice to meet you” or “Nice to see you.”
The beauty of What’s up? is that it is not really a question in need of an answer. Just like the French “ça va?” you can respond to “What’s up?” with… you guessed it: “What’s up?”!
We know you’re thinking it, so here’s the beer commercial that made the phrase world famous.
20. Awesome!
Meaning: great
In the old days, awesome was a word reserved for the truly powerful, fear-inducing and sublime: the view from a mountaintop, the sea during a storm, the voice of God emanating from a burning bush. You know, massive, awe-inspiring things that “put the fear of God in ya.” But awesome has expanded in the American lexicon to include the less awe-inspiring, like a hit single, a hamburger, some new sneakers… if you’re even just mildly excited about something, it can be awesome:
  • “I saw the new Star Wars in IMAX over the weekend.”
  • “Awesome. Did you like it?”
  • “Oh yeah, it was awesome. Hey, can I get a sip of your iced tea?”
  • “Sure.”
  • “Awesome, thanks.”
19. Like
Like can be used as multiple parts of speech (comparing similar things, in similes, a synonym for “enjoy”), but it’s slang usage — introduced into youth culture by “valley girls” in the 1980s — is hard to pin down.
  • “Oh my god, it was like the worst date I’ve ever been on. Richard was like such a jerk!”
In this example, like could be mistaken for a preposition meaning “similar to,” but it’s actually not! When dropped into sentences in this manner, like is a discourse particle or discourse marker which denotes topic changes, reformulations, discourse planning, stressing, hedging, or back-channeling.
In practical terms, “like” is the word that just falls into the gaps in speech when you might otherwise say “um” or “uhhh.” If you want to hear like in action, there is no better example than Shoshanna from the TV show Girls. She’s like the best!
Important note: Peppering too many likes into conversation can make one sound childish and frivolous — fine for parties but probably not job interviews (but most Americans under the age of 35 say the word more often than they probably realize).
18. I hear you / I hear ya
Meaning: I empathize with your point of view
With only three words you can make it plain that you are really listening to someone and relate to what they are saying:
  • “I’m kinda sad to be back from vacation. I wish I was still on that sandy tropical beach.”
  • “I hear ya. After I got back from Acapulco, the view from my apartment depressed me for weeks.”
“Tell me about it,” is the sarcastic alternative, as in “don’t tell me about it because I already know too well!”
17. Oh my God!
This exclamation is not as pious as it sounds. In fact, conservative religious types would probably find it tasteless (not to mention that it breaks the fourth commandment!) and would likely substitute with “Oh, my goodness!” Denizens of the internet probably recognize the version of this phrase that’s become enshrined in meme-dom as “ermahgerd.”
The rest of the countdown is HERE.

Gerry visits the steam tractor museum today.  I realize my pictures are from Winter, and may not be as much fun as what he'll experience today.  On the other hand, steam is wonderful any time of year.


Friday, May 10, 2019

Archie's Contribution

We got the social coverage of Archie yesterday.  Today we wonder about the financial aspects of the new baby. What does he contribute to the British taxpayer? 

Buckingham Palace and Windsor Castle get 2.7 million visitors a year.  The monarchy's annual contribution to the UK economy is estimated at around 1.8 billion pounds a year, with an additional tourism revenue of 550 million pounds.  They work as ambassadors has been estimated to be worth 150 million pounds a year in increased trade.

Then there are the secondary recipients of revenue - all those newspapers who cover royal weddings and royal babies.  That is valued at 50 million pounds a year. And the betting - it has been reported that baby-related bets totalled $1.3 million at the bookmaker William Hill. 

Forbes reports that the royal infant could boost spending on baby products by about $1.5 billion. There's a lot of merchandise to commemorate the baby's birth.  These limited edition items are already sold out. These are just a few of the immediate and clear benefits.  There is an expectation of increased tourism numbers this year. And finally, there is the 'feel good' effect at a time of anxiety of Brexit. And how does this contribute? It is expected to boost spending across bars, restaurants, souvenir shops and museums.  

So Archie is quite the contributor to the British economy:  we are in the era of "Money Reigns".  The monarchy will remain popular for quite a while.  

Today's picture is an amazing abstract sky picture from a few years ago.  It seems like marble to me.