Eroe777
Eroe777 t1_jdrjb6y wrote
Isn’t this a George W Bush joke?
Eroe777 t1_jaefexz wrote
Reply to Disney and market fatigue by TechnicalTrash95
Gee, maybe they shouldn’t have tossed 25 years worth of EU material out the window just because they could.
Some of it wasn’t very good, some was excellent, and most of it fell solidly in between.
It’s like they sensed we were getting tired of Luke and Leia and Han saving the galaxy all the time and were clearly setting up to pass the adventures along to the next generation.
I made a choice to not start reading any of the new continuity expanded material when it started coming out. I’m glad I did.
Eroe777 t1_jadbh4z wrote
Reply to comment by KindAwareness3073 in TIL Thomas Jefferson regularly attended many different churches and declared "I am of a sect by myself" unlike many of the other devoted founding fathers. by skylightyourlife
Most of the Founding Fathers can best be described as Deists- they believed in God, but were not necessarily very 'Christian'.
But try telling that to the Republicans.
Eroe777 t1_ja9i6zg wrote
Reply to comment by Doughymidget in Jenilee Harrison as the annoying Cindy on three's company 1980s by steroidamoeba
I think it’s because r/oldschoolcoolnsfw went away and nothing else has really stepped in to replace it.
Eroe777 t1_ja9e7dm wrote
You mean The Crying Italian?
Eroe777 t1_ja5lbig wrote
Reply to comment by somethingisaskew in TIL that the 1980 miles of Alaska’s Yukon River is only crossed by 4 bridges. By comparison, the slightly longer Mississippi River is has more than 132 bridges. by triviafrenzy
I live in the twin cities. The river here is a couple hundred yards across, so bridges are easy. I’ve crossed the river in Memphis and I swear it’s close to a half mile wide.
Eroe777 t1_ja5l2or wrote
Reply to comment by beipphine in TIL that the 1980 miles of Alaska’s Yukon River is only crossed by 4 bridges. By comparison, the slightly longer Mississippi River is has more than 132 bridges. by triviafrenzy
And that far north the river is like five feet wide. The width of the river definitely plays a role in the number of crossings. Get down to Memphis and it’s a loooooooong way across.
Eroe777 t1_ja5bzzy wrote
Reply to comment by somethingisaskew in TIL that the 1980 miles of Alaska’s Yukon River is only crossed by 4 bridges. By comparison, the slightly longer Mississippi River is has more than 132 bridges. by triviafrenzy
I counted on google maps. I saw a half dozen or so at St. Louis, fewer at Memphis and about the same at New Orleans. And I counted multiple span (separate bridges for each direction) freeway bridges as a single bridge.
Eroe777 t1_ja28mho wrote
Reply to comment by BayouMoose in TIL that the 1980 miles of Alaska’s Yukon River is only crossed by 4 bridges. By comparison, the slightly longer Mississippi River is has more than 132 bridges. by triviafrenzy
Even in the larger cities I didn't see many. St Louis, Memphis and New Orleans didn't seem to have any more combined than what I counted in Minneapolis alone.
Eroe777 t1_ja28im9 wrote
Reply to comment by somethingisaskew in TIL that the 1980 miles of Alaska’s Yukon River is only crossed by 4 bridges. By comparison, the slightly longer Mississippi River is has more than 132 bridges. by triviafrenzy
Not necessarily.
The Mississippi is very long, but there aren't very many built up areas along it's length. There are only four big metropolitan areas- Minneapolis/Saint Paul, Saint Louis, Memphis, and New Orleans- and the latter three combined don't have more than what I counted in Minneapolis alone. I'm not bored enough to count the whole length, but it wouldn't surprise me if half of those 132 bridges have at least one end in Minnesota. (I did count 32 just in the Twin Cities metropolitan area)
Eroe777 t1_ja24kv9 wrote
Reply to TIL that the 1980 miles of Alaska’s Yukon River is only crossed by 4 bridges. By comparison, the slightly longer Mississippi River is has more than 132 bridges. by triviafrenzy
I counted 17 bridges across the Mississippi just in Minneapolis, leading either to another part of Minneapolis or to Saint Paul.
Eroe777 t1_ja1pf55 wrote
Reply to [Sportsnet] Linus Ullmark of the Boston Bruins scores a goalie goal against Vancouver! by BCLetsRide69
I was curious, so I looked it up.
This is the 16th goalie goal. Ever.
It is about evenly split between the goalie taking the shot, and the goalie being credited as the last player to touch the puck on an own goal.
The New Jersey Devils have been involved in five of them- Martin Brodeur has three goals, and two were scored against them. And, given when they happened, it is likely Brodeur was in goal for the two own goals against.
Edit: I had the number of goals incorrect.
Eroe777 t1_j9vfu1p wrote
Reply to This mannequin’s pose by TTLYShittyThrowAway
The caption at the top says 'long sleeved'.
The photo shows a strapless dress.
I'm confused.
Eroe777 t1_j9i88ia wrote
Reply to TIL that at its peak, AOL / America Online was responsible for 50% of CDs manufactured worldwide by eskihomer
I wonder if those guys who were trying to collect a million AOL CDs ever came anywhere near their goal.
Eroe777 t1_j8s72jw wrote
Reply to comment by Scottland83 in TIL the phrase “you can’t handle the truth” was created/ improvised by Jack Nicholson. The movie's original screenplay boasted the line "You already have the truth," which Nicholson trimmed to "You can't handle the truth." by SixedSigma
It’s kind of like “Failure is not an option.” From Apollo 13. It’s possibly the most famous line from the movie, yet Gene Kranz never said it. Didn’t stop him from using it as the title of his autobiography, though.
(The other famous line, “Houston, we have a problem.” was also never said in real life. Jim Lovell actually said, “Houston, we’ve had a problem.” or something very similar.)
Eroe777 t1_j8eg0bl wrote
Reply to Mikaela Shiffrin leads push for winter sports sustainability amid climate crisis by Kasprosian
The only solution that can work long term is to abandon the limiting and oh, so corrupt bidding process and set permanent host cities. Whether it be a single city where everybody gathers every four years, or a handful used in rotation, doing so will will hit eliminate the bribery the IOC expects (yay!) and will also eliminate (nearly) completely the waste that comes with cities having facilities that sit completely unused after the Games are done. (I prefer several cities in rotation)
Both Summer and Winter Olympics should go this route.
My picks for permanent Summer hosts- Los Angeles, London, Sydney, Tokyo and Rio (assuming Brazil can get its act together). And I would add an African city at some point as well.
My Winter Games picks would be- Vancouver, Pyeongchang, an Alpine city to be determined, and a city in Scandinavia.
Yes, these are all fairly recent hosts. That’s because they should all still have a lot of infrastructure already in place.
Eroe777 t1_j4fqbwm wrote
Reply to My friend learning how to jump by shipj9
“ABC’s Wide World of Sports. The thrill of victory. The agony of defeat.”
Eroe777 t1_j3pqfr7 wrote
I’m surprised to see the Vikings so close to the mean considering how bad their defense was this season. 13-4 with a negative point differential? How the hell does that happen?
Eroe777 t1_j2fwg8f wrote
Reply to I realized why girls like tall men by axon225
I went to high school with a guy who was 7’2”. (Yes, he had a cup of coffee in the NBA, no, I will not name him). One of my friends used to joke that he should date our 4’9” classmate, so she could give him a blowjob without having to kneel.
Eroe777 t1_j2eka1y wrote
So is he now Sir Doctor Brian May, or Doctor Sir Brian May?
Eroe777 t1_j292010 wrote
Reply to comment by RenzoARG in My degree from 16 years ago has Arnold Schwarzenegger's signature on it by Purpoisely_Anoying_U
That’s because the degree IS the more impressive thing here. You should value it more.
The Governator’s signature is ultimately an interesting curiosity, which is why it fits this sub.
Four years’ worth of graduates from the University of Minnesota have their diplomas signed by Jesse “The Body” Ventura. It’s cool and all, but the degree is the important thing.
Still, 48 states can never brag about being run by one of the stars of Predator.
Eroe777 t1_j28zpo2 wrote
I haven’t seen anybody as the important question yet- is Jerry’s Pizza any good?
Eroe777 t1_j1r39wl wrote
Reply to comment by WarrenMulaney in Carnac the Magnificent, Johnny Carson's comic character starting in 1964. A: "The La Brea Tar Pits." Q: "What do you have left after eating the La Brea Tar Peaches?" by L0st_in_the_Stars
Say what you will about Carnac, that is one of the funniest moments of television I have ever seen.
It’s a legitimately very funny joke. But what made the bit immortal was Johnny trying to get through it without laughing and spoiling it (He knew the punchline beforehand, Ed didn’t), and then everybody losing it afterward.
Eroe777 t1_iz5lkdh wrote
Reply to [TIME] Aaron Judge ( @TheJudge44 )—who set a new American League home-run record earlier this year—is TIME’s 2022 Athlete of the Year by thediesel26
Anybody besides me habitually ignore the ‘American League’ in this and any other similar headlines?
Eroe777 t1_jefxech wrote
Reply to comment by Billy1121 in THE NANNY never ceases to be funny. It's campy and silly and Fran Drescher was a highlight. by Lisieu_Lustre
Daniel Davis is from Arkansas. He does a flawless British accent.
Mr Sheffield’s actor (I’m too lazy to look up his name) is English. Viewers would complain about his ‘fake’ English accent.
Viewers are stupid. They do t realize there are a zillion British accents.