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Weird Stuff > It Came From the Internet

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message 701: by Angela (new)

Angela Carlson | 18 comments Oh and don't forget to baste! You would not believe how quick those little boogers will dry out.


message 702: by Rodney (new)

Rodney Carlson (rodneycarlson) | 617 comments description

Apparently they did come up with a big wheel for adults.

Found on http://hiconsumption.com/2013/07/gree...


message 703: by CartoonistAndre (new)

CartoonistAndre | 725 comments At a mere 75 grand? You'd look sharp on that Bad Boy, Rodney! Make sure you're wearing a thick layer of bubble wrap.


message 704: by Jay (new)

Jay Cole (jay_cole) | 5436 comments Mod
Of course, with some elves... Who cares if they can cook?

Elf Woman


message 705: by Angela (new)

Angela Carlson | 18 comments Rodney doesn't get to ride alone. I call shotgun!


message 706: by Jay (new)

Jay Cole (jay_cole) | 5436 comments Mod
With a top speed of 50 MPH, you'll get passed by a lot of riding mowers, Rodney.


message 707: by Angela (new)

Angela Carlson | 18 comments 50 MPH is lightening fast for a big wheel would you not agree?


message 708: by Jay (last edited Dec 15, 2015 06:52AM) (new)

Jay Cole (jay_cole) | 5436 comments Mod
Angela wrote: "50 MPH is lightening fast for a big wheel would you not agree?"

Actually, lightning travels at nearly one-quarter of a million MPH, and the light from lightning travels at the speed of light, 186,000 miles per second. Either would seem a little excessive for a Big Wheel, although I would agree such speeds will blow your hair back...along with the rest of you. ;)


message 709: by Angela (new)

Angela Carlson | 18 comments OK Jay, you got me but it sounds like an awesome ride. Lol


message 710: by Joel (new)

Joel Bresler | 1587 comments Mod
Shame on you, Jay - making light of Angela's post!


message 711: by Rodney (new)

Rodney Carlson (rodneycarlson) | 617 comments Joel wrote: "Shame on you, Jay - making light of Angela's post!"

This is an anomaly, normally she is far more careful. It's getting herder to mess with her on literal statements.


message 712: by Rebecca (new)

Rebecca Douglass (rdouglass) | 2433 comments Mod
Rodney wrote: "Joel wrote: "Shame on you, Jay - making light of Angela's post!"

This is an anomaly, normally she is far more careful. It's getting herder to mess with her on literal statements."


There has to be a snide comment or off-colour joke in the typo there, but I just can't find it this morning.


message 713: by Jay (new)

Jay Cole (jay_cole) | 5436 comments Mod
Rebecca wrote: "Rodney wrote: "Joel wrote: "Shame on you, Jay - making light of Angela's post!"

This is an anomaly, normally she is far more careful. It's getting herder to mess with her on literal statements."

Rebecca -> There has to be a snide comment or off-colour joke in the typo there, but I just can't find it this morning."


A "herder" typo + "mess"... There's got to be some BS in there somewhere.


message 714: by Rebecca (new)

Rebecca Douglass (rdouglass) | 2433 comments Mod
What's wrong with us this morning, that we can't come up with it?


message 715: by Jay (new)

Jay Cole (jay_cole) | 5436 comments Mod
Rebecca wrote: "What's wrong with us this morning, that we can't come up with it?"

I thought I did.

Herder's mess = BS

Too subtle or too stupid?


message 716: by Rodney (new)

Rodney Carlson (rodneycarlson) | 617 comments yes


message 717: by Jay (new)

Jay Cole (jay_cole) | 5436 comments Mod
Rodney wrote: "yes"

Danke.


message 718: by Melki (new)

Melki | 3540 comments Mod
Hey, I herder loud and clear.


message 719: by Joel (last edited Dec 15, 2015 01:24PM) (new)

Joel Bresler | 1587 comments Mod
Actually, I was referring to Jay's mentioning the speed of light, lightning, etc. I probably shouldn't try to be clever before I've had at least one cup of coffee.


message 720: by Jay (new)

Jay Cole (jay_cole) | 5436 comments Mod
Joel wrote: "Actually, I was referring to Jay's mentioning the speed of light, lightning, etc. I probably shouldn't try to be clever before I've had at least one cup of coffee."

"Clever without Coffee" - What a great title!


message 721: by Lisa (new)

Lisa Shiroff | 840 comments Finally! A bug I think is cute: http://www.thisiscolossal.com/2016/01...


message 722: by Melki (new)

Melki | 3540 comments Mod
The only bug that gets up to 25 mpg in the city, 34 on the highway.


message 723: by CartoonistAndre (new)

CartoonistAndre | 725 comments Those curators seem to have fun with their displays, that's great.


message 724: by Rodney (new)

Rodney Carlson (rodneycarlson) | 617 comments description


message 725: by Lisa (new)

Lisa Shiroff | 840 comments Um, how do they know it was a misspelling?


message 726: by Lisa (last edited Feb 05, 2016 11:42AM) (new)

Lisa Shiroff | 840 comments Not sure if this should be in the Wild Wildlife discussion. But I just found this on the internet and I'm a little lazy sometimes:



link to article: http://www.today.com/pets/sloth-gets-...


message 727: by Melki (new)

Melki | 3540 comments Mod
Lisa wrote: "Not sure if this should be in the Wild Wildlife discussion. But I just found this on the internet and I'm a little lazy sometimes:



link to article: http://www.today.com/pets/sloth-gets-......"


LOVE that face!


message 728: by Jay (new)

Jay Cole (jay_cole) | 5436 comments Mod
And yet, people still wonder what inspired the Muppets.


message 729: by Jay (new)

Jay Cole (jay_cole) | 5436 comments Mod
Bad news, fellas...

It appears we may soon be obsolete.


message 730: by Shannon (new)

Shannon Maguire | 45 comments Jay wrote: "Bad news, fellas...

It appears we may soon be obsolete."


Don't worry. We'll still need you to kill spiders and investigate strange noises in the middle of the night.


message 731: by Dave (new)

Dave Agans (daveagans) | 49 comments Only in England do you get this quote, by Professor Robin Lovell-Badge, from the UK's Francis Crick Institute: "...most men just sit there and make millions of the little blighters every hour."


message 732: by Rebecca (new)

Rebecca Douglass (rdouglass) | 2433 comments Mod
I put the spiders outside and investigate the noises myself. I just keep my guy around because he's kind of cute.

I mean, really, all the world needs is a few guys, right? And now none?


message 733: by Shannon (new)

Shannon Maguire | 45 comments Rebecca wrote: "I put the spiders outside and investigate the noises myself. I just keep my guy around because he's kind of cute.

I mean, really, all the world needs is a few guys, right? And now none?"


I guess I shouldn't have said kill because I also try to save the creepy crawlies. I usually hide in another room while my husband tries to catch it and release it outside. If he's not around, I'll keep an eye on it and try to co-exist peacefully. But if some horror movie worthy looking thing is coming at me and won't stop then it's going down. I'll feel bad about it, but the bug should know better. If something a million times the size of you is freaking out and looking like it's going to step on you, that's your cue to back off or suffer the consequences.


message 734: by Jay (last edited Feb 28, 2016 10:29AM) (new)

Jay Cole (jay_cole) | 5436 comments Mod
Shannon wrote: "But if some horror movie worthy looking thing is coming at me and won't stop then it's going down. I'll feel bad about it, but the bug should know better..."

The creepy crawlies do know better. They win no matter what you do.

Check this out:

"In a classic and seminal paper by Turnbull (1973) (all Arachnologists should read that paper!) there are a series of estimates of spider densities in a range of habitats – and these are estimates for all spiders, not just a single family. The lowest estimate he provides is from work in a Polish meadow where densities of 0.64 spiders per square metre were reported. The highest density was 842 spiders per square metre in an English pasture. Turnbull averaged all previous published estimates and ended with a mean of 130.8 spiders per square meter. Turnbull does point that it is kind of a meaningless statistic, except that it helps us tackle the question of interest: Is there always a spider within three feet of you…?

So…. in most “natural” habitats, I think it is true that you are always within three feet of a spider."

http://arthropodecology.com/2012/06/0...


message 735: by Shannon (new)

Shannon Maguire | 45 comments Jay wrote: "Shannon wrote: "But if some horror movie worthy looking thing is coming at me and won't stop then it's going down. I'll feel bad about it, but the bug should know better..."

The creepy crawlies do..."


I prefer not to know these things. How am I supposed to sleep at night?


message 736: by Jay (last edited Mar 01, 2016 02:39PM) (new)

Jay Cole (jay_cole) | 5436 comments Mod
The Human Genome Project was supposed to eventually cure all sorts of illnesses, genetic disorders, miseries, etc. And it's entirely possible that this is true since billions are being spent so very judiciously, and so many scientists are being tasked with finding the genes responsible for such TRULY HORRID afflictions as gray hair, the unibrow...

LINK

To hell with cancer! I suggest that we petition the government and the pharmaceutical companies to spend more millions on finding a cure for gym socks!


message 737: by Rodney (new)

Rodney Carlson (rodneycarlson) | 617 comments There is too much money to be made from people with cancer. There isn't going to be a cure for that in the U.S. anytime soon.


message 739: by Jay (new)

Jay Cole (jay_cole) | 5436 comments Mod
No joke: Blondes aren’t dumb, science says

The study found that the average IQ of blondes was actually slightly higher than those with other hair colors, but that finding isn’t statistically significant, said Zagorsky, who works in the university’s Center for Human Resource Research (CHRR).

“I don’t think you can say with certainty that blondes are smarter than others, but you can definitely say they are not any dumber.”
https://news.osu.edu/news/2016/03/21/...


CRAP!! All those perfectly good dumb-blonde jokes are now shot to hell!


message 740: by Joel (new)

Joel Bresler | 1587 comments Mod
First Brexit, now this?

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/artic...


message 741: by Shannon (new)

Shannon Maguire | 45 comments Joel wrote: "First Brexit, now this?

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/artic..."


This is why I don't read newspapers anymore. They must be cutting back on the comics pages because what passes as front page news is enough to make you laugh everyday. How will the world go on with dwindling gnome sales?


message 742: by Jay (last edited Mar 31, 2016 07:06AM) (new)

Jay Cole (jay_cole) | 5436 comments Mod
Joel wrote: "First Brexit, now this?

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/artic..."



Society has simply sided with reasonable restraint.


gnome


message 743: by Melki (new)

Melki | 3540 comments Mod
Joel wrote: "First Brexit, now this?

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/artic..."


Grrr! That article really angried up my blood! Just about the only thing I agree with is the hatred of windmills (and those annoying Dutch boys and girls that frequently accompany them.) Of course gnomes are creepy; that's the best thing about them.

And everybody knows - these
description
are the worst garden ornaments EVER!


message 744: by Jay (new)

Jay Cole (jay_cole) | 5436 comments Mod
Don't Bend Over in the Garden, Granny, You Know Them Taters Got Eyes
-Lewis Grizzard


message 745: by Guy (last edited Mar 31, 2016 01:52PM) (new)

Guy Portman (guyportman) | 355 comments Melki wrote: "Joel wrote: "First Brexit, now this?

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/artic..."

Grrr! That article really angried up m..."


Come to think of it I've seen many less garden gnomes in recent years.


message 746: by Joel (new)

Joel Bresler | 1587 comments Mod
A funny tribute to Ronnie Corbett:

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/artic...


message 747: by Jay (new)

Jay Cole (jay_cole) | 5436 comments Mod
Joel wrote: "A funny tribute to Ronnie Corbett:

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/artic..."


Nice!


message 748: by Jay (new)

Jay Cole (jay_cole) | 5436 comments Mod
Government oversight???

How the CIA managed to leave explosives on a special-needs school bus - without noticing

...and they didn't even need a committee!


message 749: by Joel (new)

Joel Bresler | 1587 comments Mod
Jay wrote: "Government oversight???


How the CIA managed to leave explosives on a special-needs school bus - without noticing


...and they didn't even need a committee!"


That was really due to a little-known clause in the Iran deal.


message 750: by Jay (last edited Apr 05, 2016 09:56AM) (new)

Jay Cole (jay_cole) | 5436 comments Mod
Without doubt, the benefits of science to society are ridiculously obvious. However, the benefits of some of science's discoveries are, despite wonderfully correct math, open to a few questions. For example:

___

Thanks to math, we can calculate the benefits of human sacrifice
---Complex society may depend on occasionally murdering innocent people.

"Human sacrifice, in other words, is a useful tool for elites who want to maintain their power in a stratified society."

____


While this brief, but informative, article cannot possibly list all of the numerous benefits of human sacrifice, there is still a faint hope that we will not turn our back on any practice that truly benefits society as a whole. Therefore, I suggest we compile a list of proposed human sacrifices, beginning with:

-The Koch Brothers
-Justin Bieber
-That toddler on Flight 497 who kicked the back of my seat for five and one-half hours.
-Reality TV executives (Although, executing the brain dead may not be constitutional.)
-Anyone wearing an article of Duck Dynasty clothing.
-Plumbers who charge brain surgery rates to fix a toilet.
-Banking and financial institution executives who were paid a bonus while using taxpayer bailout money (TARP funds, etc.) to cover the fraud, waste and abuse that both screwed the world economy and served as the credo of their Corporate Operations Manual.
-Protestors with signs that prove they failed their GED exam.
-The inventors of Tofurkey and the lentil sandwich.
-Etc. etc. etc.

Please feel free to add to the list. One never knows if or when it might come in handy, and it's up to us to make human sacrifice beneficial once again.

Who says executions can't be fun??


bowling French Revolution


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