Tough morning!!!
— @brigleb
Posted 1 year ago
We’re used to National Enquirer stories on “shocking” plastic surgery, but in 2010 the rag almost won a Pulitzer. Alex Pappademas chronicles its evolution from tabloid to breaking-news contender.
Sad to hear that the Weekly World News is no more. I loved that paper. But for the record, maybe the National Enquirer should get it’s due already!
(via Instapaper)
Posted 1 year ago
I’m a big fan of the Pzizz app, which has been out for the iPhone for a while and is very for taking early afternoon naps. Which I’m convinced are very good for me.
The only frustration I have with it is the granularity of the slider that lets you pick the number of minutes for your nap. It’s got a lot of ground to cover, so it’s fairly hard to hit 30 minutes or 20 minutes exactly, or something like that. And I do like to set aside fairly specific times for my nap, because the app is very good at keeping you to that, and I have a busy work day.
But to hit twenty minutes exactly takes some patience. It would be much easier if the slider worked in discrete steps of five minutes. But it doesn’t, and I’m afraid they’ll never add my request even if I ask for it because there are no doubt a few users who like 17 minute naps.
Posted 1 year ago
There was a time in my life when I felt very certain that it was my destiny to be the first Rimbaud to come out of White Bear Lake Minnesota.
My poetry was pretty much crap, and while I cannot remember much of it now, the fragments that I can are quite awful. So I don’t think about it all that often.
My only love has left me
My only love has gone
Bereft me of what gently
I laid my love upon
Besides the sheer horror of the verse, the reason I apparently remember this rhyme is because of the incorrect usage of the word bereft. As pointed out by a teacher. Oh yes, I showed these things to another person. I had no shame.
In retrospect, perhaps the funniest thing was that I was also kind of a little computer nerd. And since we owned a primitive Atari computer (complete with fancy dot matrix printer), I kept my poetry stored as text files on the computer. I would print out about a dozen at a time, and meticulously assemble books from them. Really, I was thinking of them as musical albums, since I inevitably selected a dozen for each, and they sounded eerily similar to some Doors albums. I probably had six or seven by the end of the summer of 1988.
As far as I can honestly remember, I burned them all in a fit of poetic catharsis that very likely some rock star had done in a book I read. And unfortunately I was not keeping regular backups of my data in those days, so the text files are long gone.