Your Bag of Nothing for Monday, March 24, 2025

  • That second photo of Tracy Wolfson is so misleading. She’s wearing heels, which throws the comparison way off. Is it too much for me to ask the article’s author to include Wolfson’s height? In case you are wondering, my research department says Tracy Wolfson is 5 feet 2 inches tall.

 

  • The world has been without Rick Moranis for WAY too long. He look great at 71. Glad he came out from shying away the public and hope it’s a step towards a return to acting. Thank you, Cinema Relics, ! I don’t know how you did it, but thanks!

 

 

  • It’s funny to see old Geico commercials air during the NCAA tournament. They are so old that the vertical standard definition bars appear. All that for a little piggy. I haven’t cheered Duke on so heavily in a while.

 

  • I got my first taste of Canva this weekend. It reminds me a lot of Google’s old photo and video tool, Picasa. It’s crazy what you can create with your own pictures and videos. I put a tiny little something together for my church, and they were blown away. Huh, bringing up Picasa reminded me how much I used to use Google Reader.

 

 

  • The Longhorns have hired a new men’s basketball coach. He may be the only active coach in college or the pros to have been a guest on The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson.

 

 

  • There’s a new Medal of Honor museum in Arlington. As if the Medal of Honor recipients haven’t endured enough torture, they had to sit through Lee Greenwood.

    Those in attendance included former President George W. Bush, Gov. Greg Abbott, U.S. Sens. John Cornyn and Ted Cruz, Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott and singer Lee Greenwood, but none of those big names owned the spotlight.The night celebrated the more than 3,500 recipients of the Medal of Honor, America’s highest military decoration for valor in combat, whose names are engraved in the 100,000-square-foot museum.

    Maybe I’m splitting hairs, but I took exception to this statement as I count six; and I’m using the U.S. Department of Defense’s website as my source: “The museum stands out from the surrounding stadiums. The grey obelisk seems to float over the neighboring lake and AT&T Way, supported by five pillars representing the five branches of the military.

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