Bag of Randomness for Monday, April 25, 2016
- I really, really enjoy ‘Game of Thrones’. I really, really, enjoy ‘Silicon Valley’. But I’ll say this, it’s so hard watching one right after the other on HBO, they are so totally different. And I must say, the addition of the great character actor and Dallas native and Ticket P1, Stephen Tobolowsky, to ‘Silicon Valley’, is better than icing.
- BoyGeeding still wears his Disney MagicBand which acts as your room key, park ticket, and payment device when you’re on Disney property. He pretends it’s a communication device, though we aren’t quite sure who he’s talking to. At his tee-ball game, right after he hit the ball, you can see him start talking to his wrist as he runs to first base. He then continues this around all bases and we just get a big kick out of it.
- Speaking of Disney – Buzzfeed – Disney Fans Will Freak Out Over This Week’s “Simpsons” Couch Gag – This week, The Simpsons brought in legendary Disney animator Eric Goldberg head up the couch gag, and it’s pretty magical
- I didn’t do a hard fact check on this Reddit post, but a quick web search seems like it’s right – TIL When Prince released “1999”, 1999 was as far in the future as it now is in the past (16.3 years). As a child of the Eighties, this comment resonated with me, “My friends and I were talking and when the song came out, partying like it was 1999 meant we would be older, free to do what we wanted, go to clubs, etc; now the line’s meaning has changed, as partying like it’s 1999 means going back to little to no responsibility, clubbing til all hours instead of having to get to sleep early, etc. TL;DR still want to party like it’s 1999“
- Buzzfeed Australia – This Guy Set A River On Fire Near A Gas Mine And The Footage Is Going Viral
- Bruce Springsteen performs ‘Purple Rain’ during Prince tribute at Brooklyn concert
- BBC – The man who bet his house on his mobile phone invention
- Fast Company – How Fitbit Became The Next Big Thing In Corporate Wellness
- GIF – Poor kid just didn’t stick the landing
- Cam Newton surprises seventh graders by hopping fence to play football with them (Video) – Newton was driving along Friday past the Community School of Davidson in Davidson, N.C. when he spotted a student wearing his jersey on the playground. Th_wp_link_placeholdere Panthers quarterback stopped, asked the teachers if he could stop by, hopped the fence, and started playing football with the students, and just watch and listen to the chaos that reigned.
- Here’s the simple reason planes have winglets – Winglets allow the wings to be more efficient at creating lift, which means planes require less power from the engines. That results in greater fuel economy, lower CO2 emissions, and lower costs for airlines. An airline that installs winglets on its fleet of 58 Boeing 767 jets is expected to save 500,000 gallons of fuel annually.
- The Draw of Death Row – With “dark tourism” on the rise, Huntsville’s prison museum is thriving. – I was quite impressed with the bouquet of flowers made by toilet paper.
- YouTube – Man eats 12 cans of corn in 13-minutes. Note: I didn’t screen it for foul language or anything.
Woman who grew up in a conservative evangelical home explains why she’s not so sad about Prince
Here are a few snippets:
- That’s because I grew up in a conservative evangelical home in the Midwest in the 1980s and ’90s, with pop culture kept carefully at arm’s length. We were told — at my charismatic church where the faithful “spoke in tongues” and believed in miracles, and at my strict Christian school where girls wore skirts below the knees every day — that rock ‘n’ roll was “the devil’s music.”
- But this week brought back some of the old feelings of isolation that I first felt in the workplace and around peers from outside my evangelical cocoon — a sense of being out of place and maybe not quite right.
Instead of David Bowie and Prince, I grew up on contemporary Christian artists like Michael W. Smith and Amy Grant — and some others you’ve probably never heard of. Even those artists who occasionally scored crossover hits that made it to the pop charts were viewed by some in my parents’ circles as too “worldly” because their lyrics didn’t always mention Jesus. There were also concerns about Grant’s choice of red leather pants when she performed on stage.
- So while my friends were quoting Prince lyrics and reminiscing about going to Prince concerts, and strangers were gathering to mourn in Minneapolis, I just felt … like I was peering in the window of someone else’s wake. My friends were all in the same funeral procession marching by, and I was standing by watching.
After Prince’s death, and Bowie’s a few months ago, and Michael Jackson’s several years back, I recognized, cognitively, their importance. I felt sympathy for my friends who felt their loss. But mostly, I’ve felt isolated from all of you who share these ties, and regret for what I missed. These cultural figures don’t just speak to us as individuals; they join us together as a community. They create touchstones — without which, it’s easy to feel like an outsider.
Full Sarah McCammon article – I’m Not Sad About Prince, But Let Me Explain