A genderless style of dress for the workplace of the future

Reference: bbc.com

Canadian-Jordanian designer Rad Hourani creates outfits that both men and women can wear. Could this be the future of workplace fashion?


Androgynous clothing and style are nothing new. But as growing recognition and understanding of non-binary genders continues to change perceptions of identity – nowhere more so than in the workplace – is it time to rethink workwear and office dress codes to reflect this shift?

It may make sense for some companies to be more receptive to unisex or non-gendered clothing, not only given shifts in perceptions about gender identity but also given today's tendency for workers to blur the lines between officewear and fitness clothing.

Rad Hourani is one designer at the forefront of this movement. He has never understood why women dress differently from men.

“If we look back to the time of Louis XIV, men were dressing in a way we would today consider feminine, so this notion that men have to be masculine and women have to wear heels seemed strange to me," he says.

Despite having no formal education in fashion design, at 25 he started creating unisex clothes out of dissatisfaction with what was being offered on the market.

Driven by the belief that a world free of gender labels would be less divisive and more encouraging of people to be "limitless" in all aspects of their lives, he designs clothes and accessories that resist the categories ingrained in workplace dress codes.

Click play above to see how he’d create a genderless style of dress for the workplace of the future.

How is Earth's Age Calculated?

By 

When asked for your age, it's likely you won't slip (with the exception of a recent birthday mistake). But for the sprawling sphere we call home, age is a much trickier matter.

This week, Cherry Lewis of the University of Bristol presented a talk about the history of dating the Earth as part of the BA Festival of Science in York, England.

Before so-called radiometric dating, Earth's age was anybody's guess. Our planet was pegged at a youthful few thousand years old by Bible readers (by counting all the "begats" since Adam) as late as the end of the 19th century, with physicist Lord Kelvin providing another nascent estimate of 100 million years. Kelvin defended this calculation throughout his life, even disputing Darwin's explanations of evolution as impossible in that time period.

In 1898, Marie Curie discovered the phenomenon of radioactivity, in which unstable atoms lose energy, or decay, by emitting radiation in the form of particles or electromagnetic waves. By 1904 physicist Ernest Rutherford showed how this decay process could act as a clock for dating old rocks.

Meanwhile, Arthur Holmes (1890-1964) was finishing up a geology degree at the Imperial College of Science in London where he developed the technique of dating rocks using the uranium-lead method. By applying the technique to his oldest rock, Holmes proposed that the Earth was at least 1.6 billion years old.

In a report of his findings published in 1913 in the journal Nature, Holmes expressed the less-than-ecstatic reception his findings received: "The geologist who ten years ago was embarrassed by the shortness of time allowed to him for the evolution of the Earth’s crust, is still more embarrassed with the superabundance with which he is now confronted."

The Earth's age continued to be hotly debated for decades afterward. Since then, several revisions have been made. In the 1920s, Earth's age crept up toward 3 billion years, making it for a time even older than the universe, which was then estimated to be about 1.8 billion years old.

The best estimate for Earth's age is based on radiometric dating of fragments from the Canyon Diablo iron meteorite. From the fragments, scientists calculated the relative abundances of elements that formed as radioactive uranium decayed over billions of years.

"It was not until the 1950s that the age of the universe was finally revised and put safely beyond the age of the Earth, which had at last reached its true age of 4.56 billion years," Lewis said. "Physicists suddenly gained a new respect for geologists."

For the record, the universe is now thought to have debuted, at least in its latest incarnation, about 13.7 billion ago.

What you guys don't understand is, for us, kissing is as important as any part of it.

Everything you need to know is in that first kiss.

I think for us, kissing is pretty much like an opening act.

standup comedian

sit through

Pink Floyd

The problem is, though, after the concert's over,  no matter how great the show was, you girls are always looking for the comedian again, you know? I mean, we're in the car, we're fighting traffic.... basically just trying to stay awake.

Word of advice: Bring back the comedian. Otherwise, next time you're gonna find yourself sitting at home, listening to that album alone.

mannequin

He's out banging other women over the head with a club.

he's out hitting women on the head with a club.

mastodon

sonogram

bang other women over the head with a club

mastodon

paranoid

Three's Company

Are you through with that?  = finish

fluff

glare

I just don't give them any more ammunition than they already have.

chaotic and twirly

dread

lasagna

sonogram

The big one had a thing for you.

It might take some of the heat off me.

altar

chubby

There are people like Ross who need to shoot for the stars.

anecdote

You may wanna steer clear of the word 'dumped'.

OB-GYN

mime

cervix

roll with the punches 피하다, 적당히 다루다

be on the table  검토 중이다.

made of honor 미혼 들러리

We're kind of a thing now.  a thing means a romantic relationship

You've got plugs. a hair transplant

orthodontist 치열교정 의사

border on

wind up ~을 끝내다

have[get] one's own way 멋대로 하다

nausea

mother to be 임신부

cheap shot


Reference: Quartz at work


In certain professions (I’m looking at you, developers and designers) the ability to work from home is a perk regarded above all others, save a paycheck.


Employees, however, should consider their professional goals before gleefully signing on to a commute that ends at their own kitchen table or home office.


The reason is a long-known effect of social psychology called the Proximity Principle, which simply states that we’re more likely to make connections with those who live or work closely to us. While studies tend to contradict one another on whether remote workers are more or less productive, the connections you make in the office are key to your success in two other important areas: your network and your ability to innovate.


First, consider your network. Think about all the ways your professional life is shaped by the people you know. Who would you call for help finding a new job: The guy you’ve called from your living room six times or the person who sat in a cubicle next to yours for a few years and who you ate lunch with on the regular? How about making a good impression on your supervisor for a big promotion: Are you more likely to develop a relationship with a boss who you see every day or one who you only know via email? Both goals are clearly better accomplished with the people you’ve spent time with face-to-face instead of through a screen or on the phone.


Now, think about your ability to innovate. Both individuals and firms are more creative and innovative when colleagues are close. Those impromptu hallway and elevator conversations that come with office life help spur everything from faster learning to better problem solving, writes Dr. John Sullivan, a professor of management at San Francisco State University. Sullivan argues that some productivity will be lost in foregoing remote work, but “you will gain that initial economic loss and much more back over both the short and long term as a result of the dramatic increase in collaboration and innovation.”


Many businesses have figured this out. Google, Apple and Facebook are somewhat notorious for requiring office work. Other firms that were once known for liberal remote work policies are adopting new practices. Marissa Mayer famously ordered Yahoo employees back to the office in 2014 in search of more innovation. Ditto for IBM this year.


While the research focuses on the benefits employers reap when workers are in close proximity to one another, your career will likely see some of the same network and innovation upside, even if it means living in a cubicle (or an open office, which can be even worse) and enduring the many hallway conversations in which those innovation sparks don’t fly.


Jeff Bezos's Guide to life


Reference: TechCrunch

YouTube: Interview: Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos

YouTube: Gala2017: Jeff Bezos Fireside Chat

TechCruch: Inside Summit Series


Here are Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos’s tips about inspiration, work-life balance, and how to be an inventor. Oh, and how it felt getting doused with champagne at his rocket landing. The world’s richest person displayed an unprecedented level of candor during an interview at invite-only getaway Summit Series in Los Angeles this weekend.


Why did Jeff get so vulnerable? Because his little brother Mark Bezos was the interviewer. Set against a backdrop of old Bezos family photos at the opulent Orpheum Theater, Jeff revealed his personal philosophy.


The final line of his high school Valedictorian speech: “Space, the final frontier. Meet me there” he said, turning Star Trek’s motto into a call to action.


How he learned resourcefulness: Jeff spent summer from age four to sixteen on an isolated farm owned by his grandfather he called “Pop”. Without access to outside help, Pop had to rely on himself. Jeff said. Pop went as far as making his own needles and doing his own veterinary work like suturing cattle. Jeff spent a summer repairing an old piece of Caterpillar construction equipment Pop had bought for $5000 — a huge discount because it was entirely broken. When the giant mail-order gears for the repair arrived, they were too heavy to move…so Pop built his own miniature crane to lift them. “He would take on major projects he didn’t know how to do, and then he did them” says Jeff.


On practicing resilience: Jeff’s Pop once tore the top of his thumb off. He had tried to jump out of his moving truck and unlatch the farm’s gate before the car slid through, but the car slammed into the gate that nearly took off Pop’s finger, which was hanging on by a thread. He was so mad that he tore the top of the thumb off and threw it in the bush, then drove himself to the hospital. Rather than have his thumb stitched to his side to regrow, Pop just had the docs do a quicker skin graft from his butt. Jeff distinctly remembers how from then on “his thumb grew butt hair”. But rather than complain, Pop would just shave his thumb along with his face. “Each time you have a setback, you’re using resilience and resourcefulness, and inventing your way out of a box” says Jeff.


On raising kids: Jeff and his wife let their kids use sharp knives since they were four and soon had them wielding power tools, because if they hurt themselves, they’d learn. Jeff says his wife’s perspective is “I’d much rather have a kid with nine fingers than a resourceless kid.”


On choosing a romantic partner: When Jeff decided he was ready to settle down, his friends set him up on tons of blind dates. He eventually knew he’d found his wife when he met someone truly resourceful. “I wanted a woman who could get me out of a third-world prison” Jeff said. 


How he knew to leave his job and start Amazon: Jeff had been working in finance software engineering on Wall Street. But in 1994, he told his boss he wanted to start an Internet bookstore. His boss told him it was a pretty good idea but that it was “a better idea for someone who didn’t have a good job.” Jeff took a few days, and decided “the best way to think about it was to project my life forward to age 80” and make the decision that “minimized my regrets. You don’t want to be cataloguing your regrets.” And while you might feel remorse for things you did wrong, he said more often regrets stem from the “path not taken” like loving someone but never telling them. “Then it was immediately obvious” that he should leave to start Amazon. “If it failed, I would be very proud when I was 80 that I tried.”


What he’d be doing if he wasn’t ‘Jeff Bezos': “My best guess is I’d be a very happy software engineer” following his interest in machine learning and AI. But he admits “I have this fantasy of being a bartender. I pride myself on my craft cocktails.” But be warned, he says he’s extremely slow. His fantasy bar would have a sign saying “do you want it good or do you want it fast?”


On his personal connection to the news and owning the Washington Post: Jeff says “Pop obsessively watched the Watergate hearings” in 1973. That might have subconsciously influenced how high he values investigative journalism, which he expressed by acquiring the Washington Post in 2013.


On the need for space travel and his rocket company Blue Origin: “We have to go to space to save earth” Jeff says, noting “we kind of have to hurry.” Still, he believes Plan A and Plan B both need to be protecting the environment of Earth to keep it livable. “We’ve sent robotic probes to every planet in our solar system. This one is the best. It’s not even close.”


On space entrepreneurship: The key to opening the opportunities of space is reducing the price of getting objects out of Earth’s gravity. “We have to lower the cost of admission so thousands of entrepreneurs can have startups in space, like we saw with the Internet”, noting how web companies exploded in popularity as infrastructure costs came down.


On phone addiction and multi-tasking: Mark says his brother Jeff is surprisingly present, and rarely distracted by his phone. Jeff explains that “When I have dinner with friends or family, I like to be doing whatever I’m doing. I don’t like to multi-task. If I’m reading my email I want to be reading my email” with his full attention and energy. Jeff exhibited this resistance to multi-tasking early in life. At Montessori school, he’d refuse to move on to the next task as the day progressed, so the teacher would literally pick up him and his chair and move him to the next project. Instead of constantly switching back and forth, Jeff says he sequentially focuses. “I multi-task serially.”


On how to establish work-life balance: “I like the phrase ‘work-life harmony'”, Jeff says. “Balance implies there’s a strict trade-off.” If he feels like he’s adding value and is a productive member of a team at work, “it makes me better at home. If I’m happy at home, it makes me a better employee, a better boss.” Don’t be someone who drains energy out of their co-workers or family. He believes it’s not just about how you allocate hours in the day, but whether you have enough energy to participate with enthusiasm.


On how to be an inventor: Because the world is so complicated, you have to be a “domain expert” to find solutions to problems. “But the danger is that once you’re a domain expert, you can be trapped by that knowledge.” You have to approach things with childlike curiosity. Inventors are the experts with beginners minds, he says.


On what defines you: “We all get to choose our life stories. It’s our choices that define us, not our gifts. You can only be proud of your choices” Jeff says. You either choose a life of “ease and comfort”, or of “service and adventure”, and when you’re 80, you’ll be more proud of the latter.


Jeff’s go-to toast: “To adventure and fellowship” he says. He says he chose the ‘fellowship’ instead of just ‘friendship’ because, “for me the word fellowship conjures a vision of traveling down the road together.”


And finally, his most ridiculous quote of the talk: When discussing the tarmac celebration pictured up top after the successful landing of his Blue Origin New Shepard reusable rocket, Jeff said “My cowboy hat still has champagne stains. The best kind of stains.”

Season 01 Ep 01. Grab a spoon

Grab a spoon

More like a metaphor than a slang word, grab a spoon means that women are like different types ice-creams and that you should grab a spoon(meaning that you should get back in the game)

"Dude, I just broke up with Wendy."

"Hey, listen you gotta grab a spoon dog."


Billy, don't be a hero. 1974

YouTube: Paper Lace - Billy don't be a Hero 1974

Wikipedia: Billy Don't Be a Hero



If I can invade Poland, There isn't anything I can't do. Chandler was referring to Hilter during WII who said that 'if I can invade Poland, I can have the entire world' meaning that if he could invade Poland there was nothing he couldn't do. Thankfully he was wrong. - answers.com


Lenny and Squiggy Neighbors of Laverne and Shirley 

Wikipedia: Laverne & Shirley

YouTub: Lenny & Squiggy


Barn raising scene The film Witness starred Harrison Ford and Kelly McGillis. It was a suspense thriller set in the Amish community of America. The love scene was really the "Don't know much about history" scene. The barn raising scene was just that. All the neighbors and friends turned up to help a young couple (newlywed I think) literally raise a barn. The scene was significant as it showed the close relationship between the Amish people. The only sound was the hammering of nails and rousing background music. Barn Raising itself is a community event for the Amish people. The number of people helping make up for the lack of modern equipment and tools. Men and boys in the community help. The bulk of the work is completed in one day. While the men work the women prepare food for them.  - usingenglish.com

YouTube: Witness Barn Scene


Wee One's production of Pinocchio "Wee Ones" refers to little children. In this context, it's the name of the theater company, which means Joey acted in a children's show. Of course, Joey feels a little ashamed because he isn't famous. - italki.com

There was no snap in his turtle for two years. He was impotent for years. - tip.daum.net


Liza Minnelli

YouTube: Cabaret, Liza Minnelli

Wikipedia: LizaMinneli

YouTube: Theme from New York, New York

Shine Your Shoes Like A Soldier


Reference: The art of manliness


There I was, staring down at my lackluster boots with a sinking feeling in my stomach. It was day two of basic training and we had just been informed that we had one hour to get our boots as shiny as our cadre’s (each looked as if they were covered in glass)…or we weren’t going to like the repercussions. Never in my life had I shined a pair of shoes and now I was under the gun, trying to inconspicuously imitate my roommate who grew up a military brat and had apparently been doing it since he was 5. I learned very quickly how to shine shoes that day…not quickly enough, but that’s another story for another time.

Chances are, unless you join the military, you will never have to face punishment for not having shiny shoes. Nonetheless, it is a great skill to have in your man arsenal. Whether it’s an upcoming wedding, graduation or simply another day at the office, a pair of shiny shoes can set you apart as a man that knows how to take care of himself.


Not only does shining your shoes look good, it is a necessary part of properly caring for and maintaining a nice pair of leather shoes or boots. The polish itself helps moisturize and waterproof the leather, lengthening a shoes lifespan.


How To Shine Your Shoes Like a Soldier

There are a lot of opinions when it comes to the best way to shine a shoe. Everyone has their own unique twist from using spit to using a lighter to burn the top coat of polish (cool, although potentially dangerous). The process below is a simple one that I have used for many years and it has worked fine for me and many of my military peers.


Step 1: Find an old towel or newspaper to spread over the area you will be working on. Shoe polish has an uncanny ability to get smeared everywhere even when you’re being extremely careful…and it’s really hard to get out of carpet.


Step 2: Clean the dust and dirt off your boots with a horsehair shine brush or damp rag. If you must get your boots a little wet to clean them off, allow them time to dry before applying the polish.


Step 3: Cover the entire shoe with a generous amount of polish, using your shoe polish brush. The polish I’m using is black Kiwi Shoe Polish, but be sure to match the color of the polish to your shoe as closely as possible. Make sure you get down in the seams of the shoe and attempt to cover evenly with polish. Allow 15 minutes for the polish to dry.


Step 4: Brush the entire shoe vigorously using the horsehair shine brush. The point of this is to basically brush off all the excess polish, leaving only a small film on the outside of the shoe.


Step 5: Once you feel comfortable that the entire shoe has been covered and brushed it is time to focus on the toe and heel for extra shine. Dip a cotton ball or pad into some water and squeeze out any excess moisture so it is damp, not dripping. Then get a little polish on the damp cotton. Next apply the polish on the toe and heel of the shoe using small circular motions. Sit back, this is going to take a while.


Step 6: Repeat Step 5 until you are satisfied with the level of shine. Remember to use a new piece of cotton each time and to remove all excess polish before applying a new coating. Also, the initial shine is the hardest, it should get a bit easier each time you do it. These boots were fairly new and this was my first time giving them a good shine. From start to finish, it took me approximately 45 minutes to get them to the state shown below. Most of this was spent with the cotton pads shining the toe and heel. If I were to come back in a couple weeks it would take me half the time to do the same job.


Building a Shoe Shine Kit:

Before you try to build one, if you have black shoes you can always just buy the one sold on military bases worldwide…and the one I use. It is basic, cheap and has worked for me for 6 years. Here is the link. If, however, you want a nicer kit, different colors of polish, or just like being independent, here are the items you need:


tin of wax polish

horsehair shine brush

shoe polish brush (applicator)

cotton balls

shine cloth

Extra Thoughts:


For those of you who are really hardcore, you can clean up the edges of the sole by purchasing edge dressing. It’s basically black goop that goes around the edge of the sole and makes it look shiny. I’m not a fan of it, but you may feel the urge at some point.

Japanese school 'forces girl to dye hair black'


Reference: Breaking News English


An 18-year-old student is suing her local government after her school told her to dye her hair black. The third-year student attended a high school east of Osaka, Japan. She had naturally brown hair, but her school told her many times to dye it black to follow the school's rules. The Mainichi newspaper reported that the school staff told the girl to dye her hair every one to two weeks. This changed to once every four days. The girl's mother said her daughter got a rash on her head and that her hair was damaged. The girl also suffered from a lot of stress at school. The student is suing for $20,000 in damages. She told the court that the school bullied her for three years and that the school would not accept her hair color was natural. She was banned from school trips and festivals because of her brown hair. She explained that teachers said things to her in front of the class that embarrassed her. This caused a psychological damage. She said that a teacher told her that she should not come to school with brown hair. The girl said that she was so stressed one day that she collapsed. She had to go to hospital by ambulance.



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Larry David Pissed Off - Curb Your Enthusiasm Season 8



Our friendship is about that much now.

I'll tell you what ~  To start to bargain ~

Larry David is petty

He goes overboard. He overdoes.



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