You’ll find the photo below, two other tomato-themes ones and Giada’s sauce recipe on this Esquire page…
Click to see the original photo.
You’ll find the photo below, two other tomato-themes ones and Giada’s sauce recipe on this Esquire page…
Click to see the original photo.
In case you needed yet another internet distraction, allow me to point you to the 120 Minutes tumblelog — that’s a weblog for very short entries — that features a sizable collection of videos from MTV’s alt-rock video show, 120 Minutes during its heyday (the early 90’s).
Here are five videos featured in the tumblelog for songs that were on high rotation during my DJ shifts at Crazy Go Nuts University’s Clark Hall Pub .
[This was cross-posted to Global Nerdy.]
Photo courtesy of Miss Fipi Lele.
For reference, see:
Photo courtesy of Miss Fipi Lele.
In your face, First and Business Class! Survival rates for various parts of the passenger cabin, based on an analysis of all commercial jet crashes in the United States since 1971 where detailed seating charts were available.
Illustration by Gil Ahn, diagram courtesy of seatguru.com, image taken from Popular Mechanics. Click the picture to see the original article.
According to this Popular Mechanics article, where you sit on a plane matters, at least safety-wise. This is in contradiction to statements made by Boeing, an FAA spokesperson and airsafe.com. Passengers near the tail of a plane are about 40 percent more likely to survive a crash than those in the first few rows up front.
Keep in mind that plane crashes are made spectacular by news reporting, but in fact are quite rare. The article reminds us “There’s been only one fatal jet crash in the U.S. in the last five-plus years.” Contrast that with the number of auto accidents; in the year 2004, there were 6.3 million police-reported accidents in the U.S. alone. Of those accidents “less than one percent” were fatal, which means that some number less than 63,000. Remember, that’s 63,000 car fatalities in the U.S. in a year compared to 49 air fatalities over the past five.
Evon Reid, who was called the “Ghetto Dude” in a mis-forwarded email from the Ontario government. Photo taken from his Facebook page.
It’s insult added to injury: not only did poor Evon Reid find out that he wasn’t accepted for a job by way of an accidental email forwarding, he was referred to in the email as a “ghetto dude”.
“This is the ghetto dude that I spoke to before,” said the email written by Aileen Siu, who works in the Ontario government cabinet office as an acting team leader in cabinet office hiring, which was meant to be forwarded to a job-search colleague.
There’s a mish-mash of issues brought up by this gaffe, including:
While surfing around, I stumbled across a link on the site Internet Duct Tape that took me to an article on Lifehacks.org titled 10 Virtually Instant Ways to Improve Your Life. Believe you me, a link like that is hard to ignore. Here are the ten ways; they’re explained in more detail in the article:
Interesting list, and easier said than done.