GYERO ARCHIVE

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roguemocha

All-American
Jan 30, 2007
12,943
6,587
0
Why does deodorant without aluminum or castor oil cost $16?

It can’t be good running metal and oil all over a sensitive area of your body.

Looking forward to Costco access when I get to SP so I can buy 20 bars of deodorant for $30.
 

Bonzo_Cat

All-American
Oct 1, 2007
8,550
7,535
88
* Once the novelty of the excessive partying wore off, there wasn't much substance. Great one-liners from Ari. Dope split-tail. A few cool cameos. Should have ended in 4-5 seasons but drug on with redundant plot themes.

* Big fan of the Indian summer, especially with having my own pool now. Never understood why places close up shop after labor day weekend when it's usually in the 80's - 90's until almost October? Many a September Saturday we've sat in Commonwealth, bourbon sweating our asses off.

* Have gone most of the summer without YouTube TV or streaming services, reading a ton more. Good little palate cleanser. Will relaunch for football season and catch up on the new Justified.

* Hope you didn't dump all your tech stocks last year, NASDAQ on an absolute tear up 36.5% YTD. AAPL setting 52 week highs on the reg.

* Is LinkedIn still a thing for business or morphed into some social media hybrid? Seems like whenever I check in there's more and more personal posts/pictures/social & political commentary.

* Onion rings problem at most places is they double as grease sponge. Did worship some Mike Linnig's as a kid tho.
 

krazykats

Heisman
Nov 6, 2006
23,768
14,723
0
Reading sounds like a fun thing, problem is I can’t actually do it without zoning out and having to re-read once I zone back in and realize I’ve had to miss something.

Teachers used to challenge me to read out loud, then test me on what I just read to them………..couldn’t tell ya ma’am! But I think I figured out exactly where to be when a team goes 3-2 zone.


F Or as the kids know it today, (U)nsatisfactory.
 
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Jan 28, 2007
20,397
30,168
0
* Is LinkedIn still a thing for business or morphed into some social media hybrid? Seems like whenever I check in there's more and more personal posts/pictures/social & political commentary.
I've noticed the following LinkedIn issues:
  • The "news aggregator" part of it is run by left-wing millenial women (look at the editors profiles) who don't care about business, so rather than leveraging the fact that it's all business professionals on the site and dominating business news, you get endless DEI and climate-change related stories. I think it could have rivaled the WSJ but they choose not to.
  • Conspiracy theory time: the value of conversational data to train LLMs is what Microsoft is banking on, so the more or that on LinkedIn the better off Microsoft will be.
 
Nov 14, 2002
40,458
53,107
113
I love to read, but there's absolute hell to pay on the home front when I tear into a good non-fiction. It's not just the 3 hours I spend nose buried in a New York Times bestseller, it's the getting ready, changing clothes, organizing my reading space, picking out the appropriate book, selecting my favorite reading light, bookmark, reading glasses, etc. Not to mention traveling from one side of the house to the other and back, stopping for snacks, drinks, naps, eye breaks, and the whole rigamarole.

Just don't really get the chance anymore. Really have to save up a lot of marital equity and just ask on special occasions, like 2-3 times a year. Tops. Not even worth it.
 

wcc31

Heisman
Mar 18, 2002
26,965
88,525
98
I use LinkedIn to humblebrag about my trivial accomplishments, rain buzzwords and corp-speak, and also to motivate my followers to be their best selves. For instance, my two posts this morning;

“I am incredibly humbled to share that I have been chosen from among 14 entries as NKYGCRTMFD Young Professional Dynamic Leader of the Year for the Upper Southeast Region.”

“Steve Jobs once said, ‘I’m here to put a dent in the universe. Otherwise, why else even be here?’ Today, I challenge all you- my friends, colleagues and countrymen- to join me in driving a big ‘ol crater in this world by thinking outside the box and being a thought leader. Instead of quiet-quitting, MAKE A DIFFERENCE loudly! As another great American, Larry the Cable Guy also once said, ‘Get’r’done!’ Lol Seriously though, have a great Tuesday. You are talented and loved.”
 

pretzel__logic

All-American
Jul 20, 2020
1,545
6,952
113
- Oppenheimer was excellent, and glad I went to see it at the theater rather than waiting for it at home. The visual/audio effects Nolan uses throughout to illustrate Oppenheimer's state of mind are both immersive and overwhelming. While it'll still be great at home, it was unreal in the theater. I usually get antsy with movies with extended run times, but it's so compelling I didn't even notice. The casting was also tremendous. I didn't recognize Gary Oldman or Josh Hartnett 'til I browsed through the credits. The cast all look remarkably like their real-life counterparts. Cillian Murphy's stare is particularly effective for this role.

I knew Oppenheimer was a complicated guy, but I had no clue about any of the security clearance issues following the Manhattan Project--or the machinations behind the hearing to strip his clearance. McCarthyism was so stupendously insane, but in context...it's not hard to see how it took hold. What a chaotic, paranoid time in history. I've read The Man in the High Castle, so it's not a novel question; but I wonder what life would look like had the Nazis beat us to the bomb. Or if the Soviets' Tsar Bomba wasn't just a shock-and-awe demonstration, and they had actually used it.

- Because I have ADHD and I hyperfocus on topics, since Sunday night, I've already devoured American History Tellers: The Bastard Brigade and I'm halfway through The Cold War: Prelude to the Present. Other Cold War-ish podcast recs welcomed for when I finish this one.

- Best story from the Bastard Brigade: the Nazis were worried about a scientist who later won the Nobel Prize (Walther Bothe) who was vocally unhappy with the Reich defecting to the Allies instead of joining their uranium program. They sent a Nazi spy to honeytrap him on his vacation to America. She succeeded, but a little too well. When she convinced him that these Nazis weren't that bad and he came back to work in the program, he couldn't concentrate worth a damn. He was supposed to determine if graphite could be an effective moderator for fission (it is). He was so lost in the sauce he didn't run his tests correctly, and the Nazis had to pivot to using heavy water...which gave the Americans time to catch up. In conclusion: fascist ***** saved Europe.

- Speaking of Nazis, when I was in 7th grade, my Social Studies teacher was explaining Nazi racial policies and what "Aryan" meant. I grew up in an area with a pretty diverse population. My classroom was not majority white. Rather than just describing Hitler's fetish ideal, like, you know, a normal person, she pointed at me, the only tall, blonde, green-eyed child in the room, and said, "She'd be an Aryan." The kid who sat in front of me was named Ivan Rodriguez. He turned around and gave me the most disgusted, withering stare a 7th grader has ever given. I could have passed away from terminal shame in that instant. Teacher just breezed on with whatever she was talking about like that wasn't an incredibly strange thing to say. (She also showed us the news broadcasts about Timothy McVeigh's execution, which...is also weird.) Probably the most embarrassing moment of my middle school career, tbh.

- July 1 until this past Saturday was a stressful, miserable whirlwind of prepping my house for listing. It went on the market Thursday night and we accepted an offer from the first showing we had on Friday. Still have to pass inspection, so not out of the woods yet, but holy ****, what an incredible relief. Especially since I had to do a lot of the staging alone with my other half working out of town. Ron, good luck.

- Speaking of moving, the basement in my new house is about to be the home gym of my dreams and I CANNOT WAIT. I've wanted a set up at home for years, but never thought it would be feasible...but now it is, and I feel like a kid on Christmas picking out the pieces I've always wanted. Why we do this, atkot. /meathead
 

rudd1

Heisman
Oct 3, 2007
14,419
21,101
0
-McCarthy was actually correct in large part. As one would expect, Media*/Hollywood had plenty of commies...and more importantly the feds/Intel community had been compromised...hell FDR had a couple in his inner circle ( John Jeffries was the most prominent, iirc).

*Walter Duranty of "the times" won a ******* pulitzer for extolling the virtues of Uncle Joe Stalin FFS.

-the problem with McCarthy wasn't that he was wrong...it was that he was a drunk loudmouth dickhead from Wisconsin*.

*man, **** Wisconsin.

/nerd.
 

august-west

Heisman
May 21, 2002
61,639
18,300
78
- Oppenheimer was excellent, and glad I went to see it at the theater rather than waiting for it at home. The visual/audio effects Nolan uses throughout to illustrate Oppenheimer's state of mind are both immersive and overwhelming. While it'll still be great at home, it was unreal in the theater. I usually get antsy with movies with extended run times, but it's so compelling I didn't even notice. The casting was also tremendous. I didn't recognize Gary Oldman or Josh Hartnett 'til I browsed through the credits. The cast all look remarkably like their real-life counterparts. Cillian Murphy's stare is particularly effective for this role.

I knew Oppenheimer was a complicated guy, but I had no clue about any of the security clearance issues following the Manhattan Project--or the machinations behind the hearing to strip his clearance. McCarthyism was so stupendously insane, but in context...it's not hard to see how it took hold. What a chaotic, paranoid time in history. I've read The Man in the High Castle, so it's not a novel question; but I wonder what life would look like had the Nazis beat us to the bomb. Or if the Soviets' Tsar Bomba wasn't just a shock-and-awe demonstration, and they had actually used it.

- Because I have ADHD and I hyperfocus on topics, since Sunday night, I've already devoured American History Tellers: The Bastard Brigade and I'm halfway through The Cold War: Prelude to the Present. Other Cold War-ish podcast recs welcomed for when I finish this one.

- Best story from the Bastard Brigade: the Nazis were worried about a scientist who later won the Nobel Prize (Walther Bothe) who was vocally unhappy with the Reich defecting to the Allies instead of joining their uranium program. They sent a Nazi spy to honeytrap him on his vacation to America. She succeeded, but a little too well. When she convinced him that these Nazis weren't that bad and he came back to work in the program, he couldn't concentrate worth a damn. He was supposed to determine if graphite could be an effective moderator for fission (it is). He was so lost in the sauce he didn't run his tests correctly, and the Nazis had to pivot to using heavy water...which gave the Americans time to catch up. In conclusion: fascist ***** saved Europe.

- Speaking of Nazis, when I was in 7th grade, my Social Studies teacher was explaining Nazi racial policies and what "Aryan" meant. I grew up in an area with a pretty diverse population. My classroom was not majority white. Rather than just describing Hitler's fetish ideal, like, you know, a normal person, she pointed at me, the only tall, blonde, green-eyed child in the room, and said, "She'd be an Aryan." The kid who sat in front of me was named Ivan Rodriguez. He turned around and gave me the most disgusted, withering stare a 7th grader has ever given. I could have passed away from terminal shame in that instant. Teacher just breezed on with whatever she was talking about like that wasn't an incredibly strange thing to say. (She also showed us the news broadcasts about Timothy McVeigh's execution, which...is also weird.) Probably the most embarrassing moment of my middle school career, tbh.

- July 1 until this past Saturday was a stressful, miserable whirlwind of prepping my house for listing. It went on the market Thursday night and we accepted an offer from the first showing we had on Friday. Still have to pass inspection, so not out of the woods yet, but holy ****, what an incredible relief. Especially since I had to do a lot of the staging alone with my other half working out of town. Ron, good luck.

- Speaking of moving, the basement in my new house is about to be the home gym of my dreams and I CANNOT WAIT. I've wanted a set up at home for years, but never thought it would be feasible...but now it is, and I feel like a kid on Christmas picking out the pieces I've always wanted. Why we do this, atkot. /meathead

You went to school with Pudge?
 

Kooky Kats_anon

Heisman
Aug 17, 2002
25,741
46,563
0
First root canal done. My entire head is numb. Dr Wong did the deed, Dr Shyong to do crown…. There was no sleeping during this… I’d rather have a colonoscopy if given a choice at gunpoint.
 

btodd0224 n/a?

All-Conference
Jun 14, 2003
1,304
1,545
78
My mom worked for the guy that was head of procurement of goods for the Manhattan Project. Said they’d ship stuff all over the country before it got to its final destination. Hard to believe they did all that without it getting out. Definitely wouldn’t work in this day and age.

Had 5 root canal’s during summer break when I was 12. Worst part was after they took out the packing and hit it with the shot of air to clear any packing left. The smell of all the drilling will be something I’ll never forget. Actually slept through most of it. Of course by the time I was done it was always lunchtime and it was impossible to eat because one side of my face was still numb. Mom and sister laughed the whole time because I would always be bleeding and drooling from biting myself because the Novocaine hadn’t worn off.

Mom had 1 cavity in her life and dad’s teeth were so bad he had dentures when he was 16. Sister took after mom and only had 1 cavity ever and I got the bad teeth from my dad. However she made up for it by giving me the bad genes that has lead to all my rare diseases.
I never had a chance.
 

Ron Mehico

Heisman
Jan 4, 2008
15,473
33,054
0
Bottom middle is the version we all want, the one we all deserve

Just booked Labor Day in Montauk. Some place in New York, have no clue where the hell she finds these places but they all seem to be pretty cool so whatever
 

roguemocha

All-American
Jan 30, 2007
12,943
6,587
0
Bottom middle is the version we all want, the one we all deserve

Just booked Labor Day in Montauk. Some place in New York, have no clue where the hell she finds these places but they all seem to be pretty cool so whatever
The Affair on HBO is all set there, pretty good show for two seasons.
 
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Ron Mehico

Heisman
Jan 4, 2008
15,473
33,054
0
A childhood friend of mine has a restaurant there, @Ron Mehico. Where are y’all staying? I looked at it a while back and obviously the Hampton’s aren’t cheap.

Mavericks Montauk

It looks pretty fancy.


The Montauk yacht club. We don’t have a yacht unfortunately. I don’t think it’s technically the Hamptons, I think it’s a slightly less fancy version an hour away but I had never heard of it until 3 days ago so I could be mistaken. The place is about half the price of the place we stayed at in Martha’s Vineyard last year but it looks to have a similar vibe which would be cool.
 
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wildcatadam6

All-Conference
Mar 28, 2005
26,522
1,746
83
Figured I’d use my one post a year to give some props to Jeff Brantley. Since the Reds are electric this year (sorry UKO…it sucks to be you), I’ve been watching more. Jeff Brantley is a damn good color man on TV. You can tell he knows the game, understands the locker room side of things, a little inside baseball talk peppered in, and is good at breaking it all down. He’s even better if you’re on a gummy.

This Bud’s for you Cowboy.

Just my opinion of course.

-KingLlama is actually pretty damn funny on stage. Go out and see your fellow Catpaw.

Hope you all are well and killing it, per usual.

-see you in a year.
 
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