Nerves
Soup or sparks? How we figured out how they work.
Soup or sparks? How we figured out how they work.
These are more addictive than potato chips.
I've spent my time throwing bales of hay onto wagons and into barns. To think that I now complain of a hard day's work at the keyboard!
A close up view. Not what I expected.
Just relax and enjoy it—as Feynman said.
Mark Levinson has thick, black eyebrows and big, beautiful hands which flutter with energy and something more.
Turns out the theories about this have changed over time. This fascinating article reminds me of the great Simon Frith essay, "Why Do Songs Have Words?" Frith posited that pop song lyrics teach the young men of our decidedly unpoetic era the language of courtship.
A Nielsen/Netratings survey suggests they might. <I>Favorite alcoholic beveridge?</I> Hard cider. <I>Favorite car?</I> VW. <I>Favorite TV network?</I> Cartoon Network, followed by BBC America and HBO.
One of my favorites was left out. From Anthony Burgess' <I>Earthly Powers</I>: "It was the afternoon of my eighty-first birthday, and I was in bed with my catamite when Ali announced that the archbishop had come to see me."
When Jim Wier told Wal-Mart he wanted them to stop selling his lawnmowers, was he being a good businessman or was he "the dumbest CEO ever to live"?