Mildly interesting
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wrote on 28 Jul 2020, 11:40 last edited by
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wrote on 28 Jul 2020, 13:42 last edited by
@George-K Aaaaah!!! Thanks George!!!
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wrote on 28 Jul 2020, 13:46 last edited by
People are coming up with so many ingenious ways to entertain themselves during quarantine, I can't imagine that we don't have the ingenuity to fix the mess.
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wrote on 28 Jul 2020, 14:09 last edited by
Now children everywhere will grow up not believing in cinder block magic. Great job George.
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Now children everywhere will grow up not believing in cinder block magic. Great job George.
wrote on 28 Jul 2020, 21:02 last edited by@Horace said in Mildly interesting:
Now children everywhere will grow up not believing in cinder block magic. Great job George.
I keep hearing that as "cinder block magic woman" in my head
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@Horace said in Mildly interesting:
Now children everywhere will grow up not believing in cinder block magic. Great job George.
I keep hearing that as "cinder block magic woman" in my head
wrote on 29 Jul 2020, 01:37 last edited by@xenon said in Mildly interesting:
@Horace said in Mildly interesting:
Now children everywhere will grow up not believing in cinder block magic. Great job George.
I keep hearing that as "cinder block magic woman" in my head
Side story: I knew a girl in Taiwan who worked in a pub. She was a mountain person (native tribe to Taiwan) who had darker skin, who really liked that song (Black Magic Woman).
Anyway, I saw today that the guy who wrote that song just died. And his group (Fleetwood Mac) did not make it famous. It was famous by somebody else.
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wrote on 29 Jul 2020, 02:29 last edited by
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wrote on 29 Jul 2020, 13:53 last edited by
Yep. People call me alarmist when I warn of the existential risk of not believing in cinder block magic. But the sad tale of the Moa species should be a reminder to us all.
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wrote on 29 Jul 2020, 13:58 last edited by
No kidding. The other day some kid made a comment doubting cinder block magic, and I was like "Bro, you're about to go the way of the moa!"
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Yep. People call me alarmist when I warn of the existential risk of not believing in cinder block magic. But the sad tale of the Moa species should be a reminder to us all.
wrote on 29 Jul 2020, 14:00 last edited by@Horace said in Mildly interesting:
Yep. People call me alarmist when I warn of the existential risk of not believing in cinder block magic. But the sad tale of the Moa species should be a reminder to us all.
Close but no cigar. The Moa bird went extinct because Christopher Columbus’s brother sailed a different route and made it much further. Thanksgiving looked very different in New Zealand.
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@Horace said in Mildly interesting:
Yep. People call me alarmist when I warn of the existential risk of not believing in cinder block magic. But the sad tale of the Moa species should be a reminder to us all.
Close but no cigar. The Moa bird went extinct because Christopher Columbus’s brother sailed a different route and made it much further. Thanksgiving looked very different in New Zealand.
wrote on 29 Jul 2020, 14:21 last edited by@Loki said in Mildly interesting:
@Horace said in Mildly interesting:
Yep. People call me alarmist when I warn of the existential risk of not believing in cinder block magic. But the sad tale of the Moa species should be a reminder to us all.
Close but no cigar. The Moa bird went extinct because Christopher Columbus’s brother sailed a different route and made it much further. Thanksgiving looked very different in New Zealand.
It was actually the inspiration for Dickens' Oliver Twist. "Please sir, may I have some Moa?"
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wrote on 6 Aug 2020, 22:18 last edited by
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@Loki said in Mildly interesting:
@Horace said in Mildly interesting:
Yep. People call me alarmist when I warn of the existential risk of not believing in cinder block magic. But the sad tale of the Moa species should be a reminder to us all.
Close but no cigar. The Moa bird went extinct because Christopher Columbus’s brother sailed a different route and made it much further. Thanksgiving looked very different in New Zealand.
It was actually the inspiration for Dickens' Oliver Twist. "Please sir, may I have some Moa?"
wrote on 6 Aug 2020, 22:25 last edited by@Mik said in Mildly interesting:
It was actually the inspiration for Dickens' Oliver Twist. "Please sir, may I have some Moa?"
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wrote on 8 Aug 2020, 02:41 last edited by
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wrote on 8 Aug 2020, 17:59 last edited by
Lol baby elephants are so dumb.
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wrote on 8 Aug 2020, 18:34 last edited by
Seriously. Just makes me want to punch them in the face they're so dumb.
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wrote on 8 Aug 2020, 18:49 last edited by
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wrote on 9 Aug 2020, 12:27 last edited by
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wrote on 11 Aug 2020, 13:20 last edited by jon-nyc 8 Nov 2020, 13:21