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Only Christopher Nolan could make the National Anthem creepy.

    • #Dark Knight Rises
    • #christopher nolan
    • #trailer
  • 5 months ago
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Grantland posts the best trailers of all time, acoording to its staff including 2010’s Social Network. And, sadly, the trailer for The Phantom Menace> still gives me chills.

    • #grantland
    • #film
    • #best trailers of all time
    • #social network
  • 5 months ago
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Yo Yo Ma with a Wombat in the Bathroom

It is what we thought it is.

via @petersegal

  • 5 months ago
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obitoftheday:

Obit of the Day: Человек Pакет*

Boris Chertok was there when the “Space Race” began. A rocket designer and aeronatuic engineer, Chertok was a member of the Soviet Union’s space program during its height in the 1950s and 1960s. He was there when Sputnik was sent into orbit in 1957. Four years later, Chertok was part of the team that made Yuri Gagarin the first man in space. 

Chertok spent much of his career at the side of Sergei Korolev, the USSR’s leader of the space program. They had met in 1940 when both were sent to meet with Nazi rocket designers. 

Note: A reminder that Germany and the USSR had signed the Molotov-Ribbentrop non-aggression pact in 1939 that lasted until the Nazis invaded Russia in 1941. Later many of the German rocket scientists headed to the U.S. to avoid living under Communist rule. So many “what ifs.”

The Soviets’ space program, like so many other facets of the country’s military and technology, was built to compete with, and hopefully surpass the United States. Unfortunately for Chertok and his colleagues, after their early successes, the U.S. became the dominant force in space exploration.
The Soviet scientists were treated like human state secrets and could not travel out of the country until the late 1980s with the rise of Mikhail Gorbachev and Glasnost.

Chertok travelled broadly after the fall of the Communist regime and even wrote a three volume history of rocket development, Rockets and People which was published in the U.S. by his one-time rivals - NASA. He passed away in December 2011 at the age of 96.

* “Rocket Man” or, literally “Man of Rockets”

(Image of People and Rocket, Vol. 1 is courtesy of Amazon.com and copyright of the National Aeronautic and Space Administration.)

Btw, I also run this little blog.
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obitoftheday:

Obit of the Day: Человек Pакет*

Boris Chertok was there when the “Space Race” began. A rocket designer and aeronatuic engineer, Chertok was a member of the Soviet Union’s space program during its height in the 1950s and 1960s. He was there when Sputnik was sent into orbit in 1957. Four years later, Chertok was part of the team that made Yuri Gagarin the first man in space.

Chertok spent much of his career at the side of Sergei Korolev, the USSR’s leader of the space program. They had met in 1940 when both were sent to meet with Nazi rocket designers.

Note: A reminder that Germany and the USSR had signed the Molotov-Ribbentrop non-aggression pact in 1939 that lasted until the Nazis invaded Russia in 1941. Later many of the German rocket scientists headed to the U.S. to avoid living under Communist rule. So many “what ifs.”

The Soviets’ space program, like so many other facets of the country’s military and technology, was built to compete with, and hopefully surpass the United States. Unfortunately for Chertok and his colleagues, after their early successes, the U.S. became the dominant force in space exploration.
The Soviet scientists were treated like human state secrets and could not travel out of the country until the late 1980s with the rise of Mikhail Gorbachev and Glasnost.

Chertok travelled broadly after the fall of the Communist regime and even wrote a three volume history of rocket development, Rockets and People which was published in the U.S. by his one-time rivals - NASA. He passed away in December 2011 at the age of 96.

* “Rocket Man” or, literally “Man of Rockets”

(Image of People and Rocket, Vol. 1 is courtesy of Amazon.com and copyright of the National Aeronautic and Space Administration.)

Btw, I also run this little blog.

Source: miamiherald.com

  • 5 months ago > obitoftheday
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todaysdocument:

December 14, 1944

‘Somewhere in England one of the hottest bands in the European Theater  of Operations belongs to a Special United States Naval Construction  Battalion…’ The band leader and trumpeter is Coxswain Thomas J.  Lindsey (left), and the drummer is S1c. Edward A. Grant, 12/14/1944.
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todaysdocument:

December 14, 1944

‘Somewhere in England one of the hottest bands in the European Theater of Operations belongs to a Special United States Naval Construction Battalion…’ The band leader and trumpeter is Coxswain Thomas J. Lindsey (left), and the drummer is S1c. Edward A. Grant, 12/14/1944.

Source: research.archives.gov

  • 5 months ago > todaysdocument
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The Root: Why Forbes' Column Crossed the Line

    • #Gene Marks
  • 5 months ago
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comedycentral:

SPIN’s 40 Greatest Comedy Albums of All Time
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comedycentral:

SPIN’s 40 Greatest Comedy Albums of All Time

Source: spin.com

  • 6 months ago > comedycentral
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Happy Birthday University of Washington!

The university opened on this date in 1861 with the no frills name, Territorial University. (Oklahoma also had a Territorial University, now the University of Oklahoma, and the University of Minnesota was also Territorial University.) Asa Mercer was the institution’s first president and only teacher for thirty students. The first registrant was Clarence Bagley.

The school struggled closing and re-opening three times between 1863 and 1876 for either lack of students or lack of funds. Because of this the first graduate from UW was actually Clara Antoinette McCarty Will, Class of 1876, fifteen years after its founding.

UW is the oldest public university on the West Coast.

Go Huskies!

Sources: vintageseattle.org, Washington State Secretary of State’s Office, and wikipedia.org

(Image of the University of Wahington’s first building, circa 1870, courtesy of Wikipedia.org)
Pop-upView Separately

Happy Birthday University of Washington!

The university opened on this date in 1861 with the no frills name, Territorial University. (Oklahoma also had a Territorial University, now the University of Oklahoma, and the University of Minnesota was also Territorial University.) Asa Mercer was the institution’s first president and only teacher for thirty students. The first registrant was Clarence Bagley.

The school struggled closing and re-opening three times between 1863 and 1876 for either lack of students or lack of funds. Because of this the first graduate from UW was actually Clara Antoinette McCarty Will, Class of 1876, fifteen years after its founding.

UW is the oldest public university on the West Coast.

Go Huskies!

Sources: vintageseattle.org, Washington State Secretary of State’s Office, and wikipedia.org

(Image of the University of Wahington’s first building, circa 1870, courtesy of Wikipedia.org)

    • #Territorial University
    • #UW
    • #University of Washington
    • #Huskies
    • #Clara Antoinette McCarty Wilt
    • #education
    • #history
  • 6 months ago
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popculturebrain:

First Look: Helena Bonham Carter As Miss Havisham In ‘Great Expectations’ | Deadline

Why yes, that is creepy.
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popculturebrain:

First Look: Helena Bonham Carter As Miss Havisham In ‘Great Expectations’ | Deadline

Why yes, that is creepy.

Source: deadline.com

  • 6 months ago > popculturebrain
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madteapartyfortwo:

Yes. Just… yes.


Macy’s on State Street is lighting their Christmas tree tomorrow. November 5. Fifty days before Christmas.
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madteapartyfortwo:

Yes. Just… yes.

Macy’s on State Street is lighting their Christmas tree tomorrow. November 5. Fifty days before Christmas.

(via political-cartoons)

Source: madteapartyfortwo

    • #christmas
    • #thanksgiving
    • #Macy's
    • #State Street
  • 6 months ago > madteapartyfortwo
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Personal blog from the guy who runs Obit of the Day on Tumblr.

Because there are so many cool things on the interwebs that don't deal with death.

SAHD, foster parent, baseball and history geek living in Oak Park, IL. Totally how I planned it.

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  • Quote via oldtimefamilybaseball
    “If people knew what was going on there or how they did things, I mean, I won’t go to that stadium, I won’t take my kids to that place.”
    Quote via oldtimefamilybaseball
  • Photo via thingsorganizedneatly

    Photographer Julien Strangler

    Photo via thingsorganizedneatly
  • Photo via todaysdocument

    December 14, 1944

    ‘Somewhere in England one of the hottest bands in the European Theater of Operations belongs to a Special United States...

    Photo via todaysdocument
  • Photo via inothernews

    There we go.

    Photo via inothernews
  • Photo via newyorker

    thenewrepublic:

    “A nice way to get the O.W.S. message to suburban mall parking lots.”

    -Hendrik Hertzberg, The New Yorker.

    Photo courtesy...

    Photo via newyorker
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