- I don’t know why I never understood the concept of why time flies by for an adult and not a kid until yesterday. If you are five-years-old, a year is a fifth of your life, so it’s a huge part of your life and seems long. As you get older, the year becomes a smaller and smaller part of the time you have experienced so it seems to go by quicker.
- Not only do I grind my teeth at night (I wear one of those night guards) but I grind and clench my teeth all day, especially when I’m deep in thought.
- What a crazy ten days it’s been for Anthony Scaramucci: He got a job, had a baby, ended his marriage, and lost a job. But I guess he holds no hard feelings for his former boss, he dined at one of his hotels after losing his job.
- Scaramucci’s official start date was to be August 15.
- On last night’s Colbert, Matthew McConaughey said his first three words on film were, as you would guess, “Alright, alright, alright” from Dazed and Confused. I wonder the last time McConaughey felt literally stressed, he always seems at ease, high or not.
- “History doesn’t repeat itself, but it often rhymes.” – Mark Twain
- Today presidential history factoid – Andrew Johnson was buried with his body wrapped in an American flag and a copy of the Constitution placed under his head.
- The 52-story downtown Dallas skyscraper formerly known as the First National Bank tower is getting a heck of a renovation.
- Over the next year, the stone on the outside of the 52-year-old landmark will be taken down, shipped out of state and restored with a high-tech manufacturing process. Each of the inch or more thick marble slabs that cover the 1.5 million-square-foot high-rise will be sliced into two or more identical slabs, glued to a metal honeycomb backing and then replaced on the outside of the building.
- Most of the stone panels from the outside of the Elm Street tower will be trucked to Florida to HyCOMB’s plant near Miami. A few curved panels will be shipped to China for a specialized reconstruction.
- The Decline of the American Laundromat – The retreat of a longtime urban staple marks yet another way cities have changed after an influx of higher-earning residents.
- Distractions – Martin Scorsese doesn’t allow watches on set. Christopher Nolan doesn’t allow chairs or water bottles
- “They’re distractions – the noise of [the bottles], they’re like toys almost, playing around with toys. [The lack of chairs, meanwhile] keeps you on your toes, literally.”
- It’s as though Scorsese wants his set to exist outside of time and outside of the world, a vacuum but for creativity, which is allowed to bounce uninhibited.
Bag of Randomness for Tuesday, August 1, 2017
Posted in Personal
3 Comments