An excerpt from Metro.co.uk -
Rod Stewart slammed for mocking ‘orange’ Donald Trump during show as fans ‘walk out’
By Laura Harman and Brooke Ivey Johnson
Rod shared the snap from his show on social media (Picture: Rod Stewart/Instagram) |
An excerpt from Metro.co.uk -
Rod Stewart slammed for mocking ‘orange’ Donald Trump during show as fans ‘walk out’
By Laura Harman and Brooke Ivey Johnson
Rod shared the snap from his show on social media (Picture: Rod Stewart/Instagram) |
An excerpt from Buzzfeed -
29 Incredibly Cool Charts About Cooking And Food That Will Make You So Much Smarter
Reading this is almost like going to cooking school.
by Mike Spohr, BuzzFeed Staff
1. This chart in the menu of a Japanese restaurant explains the etiquette for eating sushi, and honestly I had no idea (I definitely mix wasabi and soy sauce, sorry):
u/madairman / Via reddit.com |
u/erikhenao32 / Via reddit.com |
FarmersAlmanac.com / Via reddit.com |
From Seth Godin, Seth's Blog -
The Mississippi River paradox
There’s no water in that river that was there ten years ago.
The boundaries have shifted in that time as well, there’s no riverbank that’s exactly where it was. And the silt and the fish have all moved too.
So, what’s “the Mississippi River”?
It’s a label, a placeholder, and a marker–when the Mississippi does something we don’t expect it to do, we comment on it.
People are like this as well. What if you could only be known for the best (or the worst) thing you ever did? You’re not that person now, and it’s likely you’ll never be that person again. But that’s the label we gave you.
When we talk about the organization or the brand or that neighbor down the street, we act as these are immutable objects, basic unchanging elements or static facts.
But like rivers, people change.
When the label stops being useful, we should change it. The problem with holding a grudge is that it makes your hands too full to do anything useful.
https://archive.feedblitz.com/1081591/~17137100/70470101/a91e9d7437b0702ab03785848f880103
An excerpt from the Washinton Post -
She’s an Olympic water polo star, but fans just want skin and hair tips
Ashleigh Johnson, one of the world’s top water polo goalies, shares the routine that keeps her skin and hair glowing, despite long hours in the water.
By Gretchen Reynolds and Julia Wall
There’s one question Olympic water polo goalie Ashleigh Johnson hears all the time: “How does she take care of her skin and hair?”
The first Black player for the powerhouse U.S. women’s national water polo team and widely considered to be the best goalie in the world, Johnson, 29, helped the U.S. win gold in 2016 and 2021. The Americans are the prohibitive favorites again at this year’s Games in Paris.
An obvious role model, Johnson regularly gets peppered at events and online with questions about her sport, height (6 feet 1 inch), heritage (Jamaican) and favorite food (Pho, a Vietnamese soup).
But questions about her hair and skin are by far the most common. She doesn’t mind.
“I wish that someone had had some hair and skin care tips for me when I was coming up.”
So here, for the first time, she shows us what years of practice and experimentation have taught her can keep hair and skin healthy, however much time we spend in the pool.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/wellness/2024/07/31/ashleigh-johnson-water-polo-skin-hair-tips/
An excerpt from CNBC -
Here’s how much athletes at the Paris Olympics earn for winning medals
By Lee Ying Shan
Aside from a medal, a stuffed toy of the Olympics mascot and a “mysterious” box containing the official event poster, some medalists receive additional financial rewards for their efforts.
While the IOC does not give out prize money for winning medals, several home countries do reward their athletes with medal bonuses.
Here's how much money athletes get for finishing on the podium.
Hong Kong | $768,000 | $384,000 | $192,000 |
---|---|---|---|
Singapore | $745,000 | $373,000 | $186,000 |
Indonesia | $300,000 | $150,000 | $60,000 |
Israel | $271,000 | $216,000 | $135,000 |
Republic of Kazakhstan | $250,000 | $150,000 | $75,000 |
Malaysia | $216,000 | $65,000 | $22,000 |
Spain | $102,000 | $52,000 | $33,000 |
France | $87,000 | $43,000 | $22,000 |
South Korea | $45,000 | $25,000 | $18,000 |
United States | $38,000 | $23,000 | $15,000 |
Japan | $32,000 | $13,000 | $6,000 |
Poland | $25,000 | $19,000 | $14,000 |
Germany | $22,000 | $16,000 | $11,000 |
Australia | $13,000 | $10,000 | $7,000 |
An excerpt from Salon -
Why a love of Venn diagrams is Kamala Harris' not-so-secret weapon for creating smart policy
Logic dictates that multiple variables must be accounted for in politics; interlocking circles help visualize them
By Gwydion Suilebhan - Steven Gimbel
Kamala Harris (Photo illustration by Salon/Getty Images) |
This is not the first time Harris has professed affection for this logical mechanism. As a former courtroom lawyer who needed to be able to clearly demonstrate complicated inferences to juries in a way that anyone could follow, Attorney General Harris would have found Venn diagrams to be the perfect tool.
So, too, in politics. At a speech at Bryn Mawr University in 2022, for example, she produced a Venn diagram for the crowd, saying. “So, I asked my team, ‘Tell me from which states are we seeing attacks on women’s reproductive healthcare, attacks on voting rights, and attacks on LGBTQ+ rights.’ And you would not be surprised to know that there was quite an overlap, including, Florida, Georgia, Texas, Alabama, Arizona.” The overlap in these policy goals became clear to anyone who could see.
Republicans have seized on this intellectual infatuation, calling it cringeworthy. She was mocked by "Fox & Friends" host Brian Kilmeade who said “When you peak in third and fourth grade and become Vice President we’re doomed.”
Allowing for the straightforward visualization of logical relations, Venn diagrams were in fact designed as a teaching tool. But contrary to Kilmeade’s characterization, they are a means well beyond grade school level. They were an important step in the development of formalized reasoning that led to digital computers.
If your understanding of them comes from social media and the memeosphere, you could be excused for underestimating their power and importance in the history of ideas. Vice President Harris may proclaim her adoration of them in public more frequently than she does for her husband, but looking at the development of logic, Doug Emhoff has not done anything quite like John Venn.
Here's a history tracing the meticulous development of the Venn diagram to better understand how we got to the useful visual tool we still employ today.
Not just blind luck
With the exception of the Olympics’ insignia, Venn diagrams are our most recognizable overlapping circles. Named after Cambridge University mathematician and logician John Venn, they first appeared in his book "Symbolic Logic" in 1880. In that work, he named them after a different mathematician calling them “Eulerian circles.”
Venn knew there had to be more to math than just cranking through problems. There were deep philosophical questions buried in it.
Leonhard Euler was a Swiss mathematician whose 866 published mathematical papers are the most published as a solo author of anyone in history. To make this even more impressive, he did much of this work while blind. One focus of his work was taking complex mathematical reasoning and operations and representing it using symbols so that instead of having to think through long chains of inferences, we could instead manipulate symbols according to simple rules.
As a result, he generated many of the standard representations we still use. Why is the letter x used for an unknown quantity in algebra? Euler. Why do we use the Greek letter π for the ratio between a circle’s circumference and diameter? Euler. Why is the square root of -1 called i? Euler.
In his quest to make complicated (and in the case of i, complex) mathematics simpler, Euler came upon a way to use circles to represent class membership. This allowed for a teaching tool that made certain logical relations clearer because they could be simply seen. Euler’s diagrams were effective, but Venn soon realized that they were limited in their applicability. Euler’s circles could not do something that a modified approach could — allow for a mechanical way of doing logic. Venn, with his new twist, would out-Euler, Euler.
Who, what, where and Venn
John Venn was the son of an Anglican minister whose interest was not in the Divine order of the universe, but rather its underlying mathematical structure. Attending Cambridge, he sat for the Mathematical Tripos, a grueling eight-day exam that largely tested one’s ability to quickly calculate for extended periods of time. Venn described the event as “fearfully hard work, both physical and mental.”
https://www.salon.com/2024/07/29/venn-diagrams-kamala-harris-explainer-history/
Rosenberg: I think when you look back at this magical moment that we’re in now, there are three things that really contributed to it: the picking of Vance, Joe Biden’s selfless act, and Kamala Harris coming out of the gate in a very commanding and strong fashion. I think all of… pic.twitter.com/pDJoQy7hYU
— Acyn (@Acyn) August 1, 2024
An excerpt from ForstForWomen -
Mr. Rogers Quotes: 14 Times He Spread His Wisdom on Love, Kindness and Helping Others in Need
Mr. Rogers left the world a better place than when he came into it — See these 14 quotes we love
By Raquel Lekic
Mr. Rogers in the 80s |
Never forget this iconic photo of Shaq and Simone Biles 🐐😂#OpeningCeremony pic.twitter.com/B8dWAKWgKL
— DraftKings (@DraftKings) July 26, 2024
An excerpt from Parade -
A Urogynecologist Is Begging You to Stop Doing This One Super-Common Thing When You Pee
It's probably something you haven't thought about.
By Erica Sweeney
You probably don’t think much about how you pee. You just go. While it’s a natural reflex that you’ve been doing your whole life, the way you pee could be taking a toll on your pelvic floor.
This came up recently in a TikTok video, where TikToker @postvirallife said, “I think I’ve been peeing wrong my entire life.”
Before getting a vaginal ultrasound, she said her technician told her to use the restroom but not to push when she peed. Instead, she was instructed to breathe through her nose and release the pee naturally, and that she’d know when the last drop was out once she felt a warm sensation.
Doctors say this is good advice.@postvirallife Anyone else or just me? #bladderproblems #bladder #interstitialcystisis #chronicillness #uti ♬ original sound - Katie
“Peeing is more about relaxing the pelvic floor muscles and allowing the sphincter to relax and at the same time, the brain has the bladder muscles contract to eliminate urine,” says Dr. Lopa Pandya, MD, a urogynecologist, reconstructive surgeon and medical adviser at Aeroflow Urology.
“So peeing is more of a relaxation action and not a pushing action,” she adds.
https://parade.com/health/what-to-stop-doing-when-you-pee-according-to-urogynecologists
An excerpt from WeGotThisCovered -
Gold medal-winning gymnast Suni Lee’s ethnicity, confirmed
Lee contributed in helping the United States national artistic gymnastics team win gold at the 2024 Summer Olympics.
By Kevin Stewart
Image via NBC |
Face2FaceAfrica -
The first Black gymnast to win a gold medal finally gets a statue in her hometown
By Dollita Okine
Dominique Dawes statue. Photo via YouTube/ montgomerycountymd |
An excerpt from AfroTech -
The First Black American Woman To Earn An Individual Medal In Fencing Is Also A Harvard Student With An Interest In Alternative Investing
By Samantha Dorisca
Photo Credit: Joe Scarnici |
Childless Cat and Dog Ladies for Harris pic.twitter.com/ywHt1W0ZGb
— Chelsea Handler (@chelseahandler) July 28, 2024
VP: Donald. I do hope you'll reconsider to meet me on the debate stage. Because as the saying goes, if you got something to say, say it to my face pic.twitter.com/f6Fv67p1uh
— Acyn (@Acyn) July 30, 2024
An excerpt from Time -
The Border Is Not the Problem
By Dinaw Mengestu
A new U.S. citizen, leaving a 2018 mass naturalization ceremony in L.A., waves the flagMario Tama—Getty Images |
When my father arrived in America from Ethiopia in 1978, he was resettled, with the help of an immigration agency, to Peoria, Ill. He found a job working on the factory floor of a Caterpillar Inc. plant, and by the time my mother, sister, and I joined him two years later, he’d already found a two-bedroom apartment two blocks from the Catholic school my sister and I would attend.
It was a startlingly American childhood, made more so by the fact that we spent our weekends at a Southern Baptist church on the other side of town. My parents, raised in the Ethiopian Orthodox church, had never heard of Southern Baptists before coming to America. But every Sunday, there we were, in the front pews, the first and only Black family to have ever attended the church.
On a recent cross-country road trip, my wife and I decided to take our two children on a detour to Peoria. My family had left the city at the tail end of the 1980s recession, when unemployment hovered near 20%. I wanted to see if we could find Sharon, one of the members of the church my family had been especially close to. I hadn’t spoken to Sharon in at least 10 years. We arrived unannounced at her doorstep just in time to take her to lunch. It was the first and most likely the last time she would meet my family. On the drive to the restaurant, Sharon pointed out the Greek Orthodox church near her home.
“Your mom and dad tried to go there,” she said, “but the priest or pastor told them not to come back. He said they would be more comfortable somewhere else.”
When I told Sharon I had never heard that story before she didn’t seem surprised. She shrugged.
“That sort of thing happened a lot back then,” she said. “Your parents had a hard time fitting in.”
I was about to ask Sharon how they were able to do so at a Southern Baptist church, but she saw the question coming.
“Your mom and dad met with Brother Gene, and he saw that they were good people and told them they would be welcome in his church,” she explained. “Before you all came, though, he went around and called every single person. He said if anyone gave your family a hard time, they’d have hell to pay for it. And that was it. I don’t think anyone bothered you at all.”
It felt like a confession when Sharon told the story, and I suppose to some degree it was. If no one at the church ever told us to our face that we didn’t belong—if no one ever explicitly asked us to leave—it was because the good people of the church had been compelled, even threatened, into accepting us. Had they not been, it’s unlikely we would have ever lasted more than a week at the church.
Given the current apocalyptic narrative surrounding immigration, it’s hard to imagine the leader of a conservative Southern Baptist church making a similar kind of phone call today. Whether or not Brother Gene knew my parents to be good people, he knew they were refugees, and in the early 1980s, the political and cultural framework had yet to solidify into the often dehumanizing imagery that’s common today.
https://time.com/7004943/the-border-is-not-the-problem-dinaw-mengestu/