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Incoming students should be forewarned, upon entering college, that certain degrees are useless. Some degrees just don’t pay, and if they do, it has more to do with the individual than the education received. It seems unfair that everyone can’t be whatever they want to be and get away with it, but such is life. [...]
Posted by Ryan Thomas on Friday, April 27, 2012 at 12:01 am
Filed under Business, Education · Tagged Academic degrees, best degrees, business degree, college degrees, computer science degree, education degree, engineer, Engineer's degree, engineering degree, english degree, food industry, journalist, law degree, Management, MBA, medical degree, political science, Psychology, psychology degree, public relations, restaurant management degree, teaching, useful degrees
“So what do you do for a living?” is a common enough question when engaging in small talk with somebody you’ve just met. But for a select few of the world’s workers this signifies the beginning of the end of any conversation, followed by awkward excuses and another evening spent stood alone in the corner [...]
Posted by Shell Harris on Monday, August 22, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Bizarre, Business · Tagged body farm caretaker, Bridge Experience, car hire, cent, Chick sexing, chicken sexer, cow inseminator, cracker joke writer, drooling, egg sniffer, food products, food workers, Fortune Cookie, GBP, Greater London, journalist, London, National Guard, online writer, Poultry farming, roadkill cleaner, Robin Askwith, shark tank cleaner, United Kingdom, United States, worm picker, zombie, zombie apocalypse
A lot of nasty things go on behind closed doors. Free from scrutiny, groups, governments, and companies often get up to no good, safe in the belief that their images will remain squeaky clean, no matter how filthy their actions may be. If not for the brave actions and dogged determination of a few men [...]
Posted by Geoff Shakespeare on Thursday, May 5, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under History, Nature, People, Politics · Tagged aches, Afghanistan, Al Gore, America, Assange, Bernstein, Bernstein Investment Research And Management Inc, Bob Woodward, brand new drug epidemic, Bureau of Fisheries, C.I.A., California, cancer, CBS, CBS Corporation, chemical pesticides, Chicago, Church of Scientology, cruel and inequitable machinery, Democratic National Headquarters, Detroit, Edward R. Murrow, Environmental Protection Agency, fiction writer, food, Food and Drug Administration, gary coleman, Gary Webb, George W. Bush, hacker and software programmer, Illinois, Investigative journalism, Iraq, Israel, Joseph McCarthy, Journalism, journalist, Julian Assange, Lincoln Steffens, London Correspondent, Los Angeles, Mass media, master journalist, michigan, Middle East, Muckraker, Murrow, Nancy Reagan, Nicaragua, pains, passionate consumer advocate, President of the United States, Rachel Carson, Ralph Nader, Reagan Administration, research, Samuel Hopkins Adams, scientist, See It Now, Seymour Hersh, Sinclair, software programmer, Soviet Union, Supreme Court, tangled web, the Blitz, the New York Evening Post, The New Yorker, the Washington Post, The Washington Post Company, United States, Upton Sinclair, Vietnam, vigorous, Walter Cronkite, White House, Wikileaks
Few rivalries in sports equal that of the Boston Red Sox versus New York Yankees. From Babe Ruth to today’s mega-stars, there is literally no way to support both teams without coming across like a circus freak. Of course, you can always refuse to support either team, or point out the absurdities behind this overrated [...]
Posted by Jason Iannone on Tuesday, April 19, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Sports · Tagged athlete, Babe Ruth, baltimore orioles, baseball, Boston, boston red sox, Bud Selig, canada, Cape Cod, Capital MLB inc., Chicago White Sox, commissioner, Curse of the Bambino, David Ortiz, dumber ideas sports fans, Fenway Park, hockey, Japanese baseball, Jason Iannone, jay-z, journalist, large, Major League Baseball, Malaria, Massachusetts, mlb, New York, New York City, new york yankees, Ontario, professional businessmen, Sports, Tampa Bay Rays, Toronto, United States, USD, world series, Yankee Stadium, YANKEES SUCK, Yankees–Red Sox rivalry
Whether you’re barmy for Bratwurst or loopy for a Lincolnshire, the humble sausage has been a favourite for pork-lovers for centuries. However, the tasty pork parcels have not always been as easily accepted as they are today and history records sausages being at the centre of many bizarre and often controversial events. Here are 10 [...]
Posted by Shell Harris on Wednesday, March 23, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Food · Tagged Adolph Luetgert, America, Breakfast foods, British Columbia, broker, Bucharest, canada, Chicago, comedian and businessman, Congress, Constantine, director, disease botulism, emperor, first baseman, food and drink, food stuff, Garde manger, Germany, Hassan, housekeeper, Illinois, Joseph Guillou, journalist, King, Louisa, Meat, Meat processing, meat processing facilities, Milwaukee Brewers, morocco, online writer, paralysis, Pittsburgh Pirates, pork product, Randall Simon, Roman Lupercalian, Romania, sausage, Sausage Software, Sausages, serious injuries, SMS Management & Technology Limited, Steve Vizard, tanker engineer, Telstra, Telstra Corporation Limited, Tom Parnell, United States, USD, Wildbad
The dictionary defines propaganda as the deliberate spreading of information, ideas, or rumors in an effort to either help or harm a person, group, movement, institution, or nation. Most commonly propaganda is used in the political arena. However, it can take used to convince others to embrace a particular scientific, environmental, religious or even moral [...]
Posted by Jeff Danelek on Monday, March 7, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Business, History, People, Politics · Tagged advisors, Al Gore, Albert Arnold Gore, America, An Inconvenient Truth, Ann Coultier, Antisemitism, ardent left winger, aspiring novelist/poet, author, Barbara Streisand, Baruch Spinoza, Berlin, bestselling author, Bill Clinton, born minister/author, Bush administration, Chancellors of Germany, chief, Christian Research Institute, Colorado, Congress, congressman and senator, Denver, Department of State, drive-by media, environmental scientist, Everett, fifties-something producer, Flint, Florida, Friedrich Nietzsche, George Soro, Germany, Glenn Beck, Hitler, Immanuel Kant, Jane Fonda, Jeff Danelek, John Calvin, Joseph Goebbels, Joseph McCarthy, journalist, Jr, Karl Marx, Laura Ingraham, liberally-slanted main stream media, Madalyn Murray O'Hair, Magna, Michael Moore, michigan, Mind control, Minister, Mother Jones, movie producer, nazi party, New York, New York City, new york times, Obama, Obama administration, Oliver Stone, Philosophy, Pittsburgh, political systems, Politics, preacher, president, President of the United States, prolific author, Propaganda, propaganda chief, Psychological warfare, Religion_Belief, religious belief systems, Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity, Senate, Senator, Shirley McLain, spokesman, spokesman for the movement, Stateless persons, Supreme Court, technologies, Tennessee, The New York Times Co, Tom Cruise, Truman administration, United States, United States Army, United States federal government, up censuring him in 1954, USD, Vice President for eight years, Walter Martin, Washington, White House, William Murray, Wisconsin, www.ourcuriousworld.com
As quickly as 2010 came and went, here we find ourselves in the middle of another exciting awards season. The Golden Globes have been awarded and the 83rd Oscar ceremony is next. When it comes to Hollywood’s highest honors, the Academy’s omissions often provoke more outcry and buzz than the actual winners. The Academy Awards [...]
Posted by Timeea on Friday, February 25, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Movies · Tagged 81st Academy Awards, A Wonderful Life, Academy Award, Academy Award for Best Film Editing, academy awards, Actor, actress, Adrian Lyne, Alec Coppel, Alex Forrest, alfred hitchcock, America, American film directors, Andy Garcia, Anne Archer, Barry Malkin, Bavaria, Being John Malkovich, Best Music, Bill Murray, Bob Gunton, Brian Grazer, Bruce Nicholson, Caitlin Moran, Carmine Coppola, catholic church, Chuck Gaspar, columnist, critic, Dan Aykroyd, Daniel P. Hanley, David Frost, Dean Tavoularis, director, Double Indemnity, Egon Spengler, Elliot Tyson, Entertainment_Culture, Eric Fellner, film, Film director, Film Editing, Films considered the greatest ever, Francis Ford Coppola, Frank Darabont, Frank J. Urioste, Frank Langella, Frank R. McKelvy, Frost/Nixon, Gary Fettis, George Dutton, George Dzundza, George Milo, Germany, ghostbusters, Glenn Close, Gordon Willis, Hal Pereira, harold ramis, Harry Potter, Henry Bumstead, James Dearden, James Woods, Janet Leigh, Jeanne Tripplehorn, Jerry Goldsmith, Joe Eszterhas, John Bettis, John Bruno, John L. Russell, Joseph Hurley, journalist, Lisa Fruchtman, Mark Vargo, Michael Douglas, Michael Herbick, Michael Kahn, Michael Sheen, Michael Wood, Mike Hill, morgan freeman, Munich, Niki Marvin, Norman Bates, Once Upon A Time in America, Oscar, Oscar ceremony, oscars, Paramount films, Paul Verhoeven, Peter E. Berger, Peter Morgan, Peter Venkman, police detective, poltergeist, president, producer, prominent journalist, Psycho, Ray Parker Jr., Raymond Stantz, repressed energy, Richard Edlund, Richard Francis-Bruce, Richard L. Anderson, Richard Nixon, Robert Clatworthy, Robert De Niro, Robert J. Litt, Roger Deakins, Roger Ebert, Ron Howard, Sam Comer, Samuel Taylor, Seattle, Sergio Leone, Sharon Stone, Sharone Stone, Sherry Lansing, Singin' in The Rain, Sleepless in Seattle, Slumdog Millionaire, Stanley R. Jaffe, Stephen Hunter, Steven Spielberg, sun, SUN CORPORATION, Sun-Times, The Academy Awards, the BAFTA, The Godfather, The Godfather Part II, The Golden Globes, The Magnificent Ambersons, the Oscar, The Shawshank Redemption, The Talented Mr. Ripley, The Washington Post Company, Thomas Newman, Tim Robbins, Times columnist, Tobe Hooper, tom hanks, United States, USD, Vertigo, Walter Murch, Washington, Washington Post, Weaver - Dana Barrett, Willie D. Burton
Thanks to urban legends, pranks, and the use of pseudonyms, there have been a number of people who managed to get famous without having to go through the hassle of actually existing. Some were used for shady marketing purposes, others served as tools for building hoaxes, and one was even responsible for encouraging early medieval [...]
Posted by Evan Andrews on Wednesday, February 9, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under History, People · Tagged Alan Smithee, alexander the great, Ali Larter, Allegra Coleman, andy kaufman, April Fools' Day, Asia, Associated Press, Bob Zmuda, Bree, catholic church, Clement VIII, Columbia Pictures, comedian, Connecticut, critic, culture, Dacke Axelsson, David Manning, David Schwimmer, Death of a Gunfighter, Deception, Detroit Lions, director, Don Siegel, English club Arsenal, Entertainment, Entertainment_Culture, Esquire, Europe, Evan Andrews, Far East, final product, George Plimpton, Goal.com, gruff lounge singer, Guild of America, Harvard, Hayden, head, Human Interest, Inc., India, Jean De Mailly, Jessica Rose, Joan, Joe Berton, journalist, Legendary journalist, Lenny Dykstra, Lonelygirl15, MacGyver, Martha Sherrill, media whirlwind, Mel Stottlemyre, Michael Mann, Moldova, Neil McDonnell, Newsweek, Paul Verhoeven, phantom director, phantom film critic, Pierre Bressau, Prester John, Ray Robinson, Rolf Anderberg, scripted media hoax, Sidd Finch, Soni Kabushiki Kaisha, The Animal, The Cosby Show, the Times, the Times of London, Three Wise Men, tony clifton, unknown pitcher, unreliable media outlets, US Federal Reserve, USD, website Internet Movie Database
During the late 1940s and throughout the 1950s, Albert Camus was one of the leading figures in French literature and philosophy, garnering the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1957 ”for his important literary production, which with clear-sighted earnestness illuminates the problems of the human conscience in our times”. In recent years, Camus’s novels The Stranger and The Plague have become the [...]
Posted by Shell Harris on Friday, January 21, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Literature, People · Tagged Absurdism, albert camus, Algeria, Algiers, Algiers,Algiers Dairas,Algeria, Amsterdam, Amsterdam,North Holland,Netherlands, artist, At Combat, bartender, Bernard Rieux, Camus, car crash, co-founder and writer, Combat Writings, dim-witted black-market dealer, essayist and a novelist, Europe, Existentialism, existentialism and veteran film critic, Existentialists, France, franz kafka, french, French Communist Party, Fyodor Dostoevsky, great works by Albert Camus, great works by Camus, Hiroshima, Hiroshima,Hiroshima Prefecture,Japan, Jean Tarrou, Jean-Paul Sartre, Jonas or the Artist at Work, Joseph Grand, journalist, Literature, Notebooks 1935-1959, novelist, overly-zealous government clerk, painter, Paris, Paris,France, Philosophical novels, Philosophy, Reflections on the Guillotine, RottenTomatoes, salesman, Sam Dot, teacher, The Adulterous Woman, The Battle of Algiers, The Fall, The Guest, The Myth of Sisyphus, The Plague, The Stranger, the Underground, University of Algiers
The cinema is an ever evolving art form that has made countless changes in the short time that it has existed. Great masters and auteurs have risen and fallen, inspiring countless other filmmakers. One of the most common ways that filmmakers pay tribute to their influences is to quote, or “homage,” their favorite movies or [...]
Posted by Nathanael Hood on Monday, August 30, 2010 at 12:01 am
Filed under Movies · Tagged accountant, Actor, Akira Kurosawa, Al Capone, American cinema, Apache, Apache Corporation, Bill Murray, Bruce Willis, Caligari, Capone, CapOne Berhad, carbon copy, charlie chaplin, Chicago, Copacabana club, Copacabana nightclub, Dashiell Hammett, David Holm, director, Dragon Ma, Eddie Adams, Eliot Ness, Esteban, George Lucas, Georges, Gordon Conquers, Hamlet, Harold Lloyd, Herbert H. Heebert, Illinois, Indiana, indiana jones, Ingmar Bergman, Jack Torrance, Jacques, Jane Fonda, Janet Leigh, Jean-Luc Godard, Jerry Lewis, john wayne, John Williams, journalist, Karen Hill, King, local undertaker, manager, Marine Police, Marion Crane, Martin Scorsese, Ming, movie scenes, Nathanael Hood, nearly omnipresent police officer, New Mexico, Norman Bates, Nosferatu, officer, Paul Thomas Anderson, Psycho, pulp fiction writer, Quentin Tarantino, Raiders of the Lost Ark, relentless energy, Ryuzo Kikushima, Safety Last!, screenwriter, sea captain and oceanographer, Sergio Leone, Southern California, stanley kubrick, Steve Zissou, stuntman, Susan, The Battleship Potemkin, The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari, The Glass Key, The Ladies Man, The Shining, the Star, The Star Tribune Company, Tout Va Bien, Trip to Mars, Tsar, Union Station, United States, USD, Ving Rhames, Walter Payne