Chocolate covered bacon on a stick.
On a stick!!
Chocolate covered bacon on a stick.
On a stick!!
Categories: Collapse of civilization · Uncategorized
It’s a five-alarm skeptic alert: medical genius and nose-picking Playboy model Jenny McCarthy has signed with the great-and-powerful-Oprah’s Harpo Productions to develop a talk show and other projects. Her blog has already debuted on Oprah.com, and will soon become regular reading for me. I’ll probably go there daily, right after I read Nobel-laureate Paul Krugman’s blog.
In case you don’t know, McCarthy, who is most famous now for having sex with Jim Carrey, is one of the most prominent voices in the anti-vaccination world. The BS that she spews is ignorant and dangerous.
As usual, Phil Plait of the Bad Astronomy blog (and President of the James Randi Educational Foundation) puts it best.
Oprah: you have screwed up on this one, and in a huge, huge way. Jenny McCarthy has loudly and publicly increased fears over vaccinations based on nonsense and bad science. By giving her a platform, you are virtually guaranteeing that vaccination rates will decline further, there will be more outbreaks of easily preventable diseases, and therefore we’ll see an increase in deaths of children all around the world. You have claimed to want to make the world a better place — and you have actually done so in many ways — but this one act will completely negate any good you’ve done in the past.
Categories: Uncategorized
Tagged: Skeptics
I guess if one has to pray, one might as well make it useful.
Buddhist prayer wheels can be found outside the gates of monasteries in a number of Asian nations, most famously in Tibet. If you think about it, countless people spinning countless prayer wheels for over 1,500 years would have generated an incredible amount of electrical energy had the prayer wheels been crafted to produce and capture it.
Designer Taikkun Li thought about the possibilities and is moving to put those thoughts into action with his Prayer Wheel Energy Generator.
via Prayer Wheel Energy Generator Harnesses the Power of Religion.
Maybe we can use the back-and-forth motion of Jewish daily prayers to reduce electricity costs at synagogues.
Categories: Uncategorized
Tagged: Skeptics
I don’t think of myself as a superstitious person. I don’t fear Friday the 13th, black cats, or broken mirrors (although I do have a healthy respect for sharp pieces of broken glass). I do, however, sometimes find myself acting as if I believed in superstitions. I always say “Bless You” after somebody sneezes — I guess my mother raised me right. To my immense embarrassment, I will occasionally say “knock on wood” involuntarily.
I always tell actors to “break a leg, ” because it’s bad luck to wish an actor “good luck” before going on stage. There are many folk origins for this superstition; here’s a few from the website of the Steppenwolf Theatre Company:
1) If the havoc–wreaking spirits (Sprites) heard you ask for something, they were reputed to try to make the opposite happen. Telling someone to “break a leg” is an attempt to outsmart the Sprites and make something good happen.
2) To break a leg was to hope the actor would have so many curtain calls that his trousers would be creased permanently.
3) In Shakespeare’s time, to break meant to bend. So, bend your leg, means take a lot of bows.
4) One popular etymology derives the phrase from the 1865 assassination of Abraham Lincoln. John Wilkes Booth, the actor turned assassin, leapt to the stage of Ford’s Theater after the murder, breaking his leg in the process. The logical connection from this event to wishing someone good luck is none too clear, but such is folklore.
5) Evidently, in the days of early vaudeville, the producers would book more performers than could possibly perform in the given time of the show, since “bad” acts could be pulled before their completion. In order to ensure that the producers didn’t start paying people who hadn’t actually performed, there was a general policy that a performer did NOT get paid unless they actually appeared onstage. So the phrase “break a leg” referred to breaking the visual plane of the “legs,” or curtains that lined the side of the stage. In other words, “Hope you break a leg and get onstage, so that you get paid.”
6) It came from the understudies telling their primaries to “break a leg” enough times that it came to be considered bad luck if they didn’t say it.
7) In Ancient Greece, people didn’t applaud. Instead, they stomped for their appreciation and if they stomped long enough, they would break a leg. Or, some would have it that the term originated during Elizabethan times when, instead of applause the audience would stomp their chairs – and if they liked it enough, the leg of the chair would break.
All of these explanations sound implausible to me except the first — warding off evil spirits by asking for it’s opposite. This is a common kind of superstition. In the Eastern European Jewish tradition, a sickly child would be renamed “Alta” or ” the Old One” in order to fool the Angel of Death. In fact, I’m named after my great-grandmother Alta. I don’t think anyone in the family knows what her original name was. (BTW, it worked. She lived to be very old.)
The “Break a Leg” superstitition is, in my opinion, harmless and quaint. I don’t believe that I could cause bad luck, of course, but I think it’s a fun tradition. I also think that trying to fight it would just take too much energy for too few results.
Categories: Uncategorized
From the brilliant Ryan North of Dinosaur Comics: a t-shirt with all the info a time traveler needs. http://www.topatoco.com/merchant.mvc?Screen=PROD&Store_Code=TO&Product_Code=QW-CHEATSHEET&Category_Code=QW
Categories: Uncategorized
http://twitter.com/adammagazine
Categories: Uncategorized
It’s on Arts/Entertainment Law.
http://entertaininglawyer.typepad.com/the_entertaining_lawyer/
Categories: Uncategorized
Funny. Bad language. Based on a true story.
Categories: Uncategorized
Remember the furor over Michelle Obama’s comments about her pride in America?
We know that Sarah Palin’s husband was a registered member of the Alaska Independence Party. Shouldn’t the only issue anyone is talking about now be the fact that the husband of a Vice Presidential nominee does not want to be an American?
I’m pretty open-minded, but that seems to be a problem to me.
Categories: politics
Tagged: Obama, Palin, Republican hypocrisy