IMDB |
Friday, November 10, 2017
Victoria & Abdul (2017)
Thursday, November 9, 2017
POTD: Waco: Where It All Began
From 2017 09 18 Waco |
Waco: where it all began. If by "all" you mean Dr Pepper. Today's photo-of-the-day comes from the Dr Pepper Museum in Waco, Texas, the city where it all began in the late 1800s. Dr Pepper didn't acquire 7 Up until much later, in 1988. I have no idea where it began. You could look it up. Me? I'm going to have a Dr Pepper.
Wednesday, November 8, 2017
Baby Driver (2017)
IMDB |
Tuesday, November 7, 2017
Review: A Place of Greater Safety
Amazon |
Fifteen years from now, on the day the Bastille falls, the price of bread in Paris will be at its highest in sixty years. Twenty years from now (when it is all over), a woman of the capital will say: 'Under Robespierre, blood flowed, but the people had bread. Perhaps in order to have bread, it is necessary to spill a little blood.' "
This quarter-century-old historical novel attracted me for two reasons. First, it's by Hilary Mantel. I greatly enjoyed her two novels about Thomas Cromwell and the court of Henry VIII ("Wolf Hall" and "Bring Up the Bodies"). Second, it's about the French Revolution, a messy event that any history of the modern world has to account for.
Monday, November 6, 2017
OTBR: Great Melbourne Telescope
Longitude: E 148° 55.278
After the jump, a few of the random places (and I mean random literally) that I visited vicariously (not actually) last month that are "off the blue roads".
Friday, November 3, 2017
POTD: Magnolia Market
From 2017 09 18 Waco |
Today's photo-of-the-day comes from the Magnolia Market in Waco, Texas. It's owned by Chip and Joanna Gaines, the brains and talent behind the HGTV home renovation series "Fixer Upper." Peopla have a love it or hate it kind of relationship here. Some feel Chip and Joanna are using faux rustic design (think "shiplap" everywhere) to make every renovated house in Waco look like a farmhouse. Others welcome the business that all the attention is bringing Waco and its largely vacant downtown.
Judging by the looks of the two gentlemen on the left in the photo, Magnolia Market is not just for the ladies. We had to see it. We enjoyed the market, the food truck park, and a couple of other tourist attractions in Waco.
Bonus photos after the jump.
Thursday, November 2, 2017
POTD: Magnolia Beauty
From 2017 09 18 Waco |
Today's photo-of-the-day comes from the Magnolia Market in Waco, Texas. The beauty comes from Richardson.
Wednesday, November 1, 2017
Repeat Tweets: Trump's War on Football
Repeat tweets from October, 2017:
- Oct 1 2017:
1/ Trump started a war on the NFL. His base called for a boycott. Now, Rush Limbaugh has made an abrupt U-turn.
2/ Limbaugh says it's really the *Left* that's against the NFL. Why? Because of football's masculinity.
3/3 Rush's U-turn may be a sign that the boycott isn't working. Let them express themselves. #TakeAKnee #1A - Oct 1 2017: RT @BudKennedy: "Dallas ISD's Joyce Foreman on school names (she's OK with just 'Stonewall Elementary')."
Can someone explain this woman's thinking to me? - Oct 1 2017: "Anti-monopoly candidates are testing a new politics in the midterms." @Lillian_Salerno takes on Pete Sessions.
After the jump, more repeat tweets.
Tuesday, October 31, 2017
The Eagle Huntress (2016)
IMDB |
Monday, October 30, 2017
Lessons from Jeffrey Weiss
Jeffrey Weiss, longtime staff writer at The Dallas Morning News, died October 25, 2017 from glioblastoma, a form of brain cancer. He wrote about his journey to the egress, as he put it, with realism and good spirit. But I don't want to speak of his illness. It's his writing that inspired me. I said upon his death that Jeffrey Weiss was the best thing that ever happened to Facebook. What I meant is that where most (reasonable) people steered away from the closed-minded, interminable arguments with (crazy) people, he saw an opportunity to engage everyone, taking their opinions and beliefs seriously and gently probing those beliefs in hopes of achieving some level of mutual understanding. He promoted what he called civil dialog, or "civilogue". He influenced no less than the New York Times to change their practices regarding online comments. I admired his approach, and although I sometimes sought to emulate Weiss, I all too often resorted to snark, sarcasm, and satire. Reading Weiss made me uncomfortable doing so.
After the jump, two maxims from Jeffrey Weiss.
After the jump, two maxims from Jeffrey Weiss.
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