Shared posts

15 May 21:05

My Armory Demands One: The Cross-Bladed Axe

danipretto

ha. simple yet effective. @craig - like we talked about. don't have to reinvent the wheel... just make it better.

cross-bladed-axe.jpg The cross-bladed axe is the brainchild of Instructables user KH4 and can cut a log into four pieces with a single swing. For reference, that is twice as many pieces as a regular axe can. Of course it probably takes more power to drive a cross-bladed axe, but I'm practically made of muscle so it's no big deal. And by muscle I mean Jello. And with pieces of cat-food inside like Aunt Bethany's Jello casserole in National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation. Didn't you want to try that? I wanted to try it. Uncle Eddie made that shit look GOOOOD. Keep going for a video of axe in action, then wish you'd followed your dream of becoming a lumberjack.
15 May 20:05

Oh, Japan, You Complete Me: The 'Try To Blow A Cockroach Into The Other Person's Mouth' Game

danipretto

ew ew ew ew ew ew ew

japanese-bug-blowing-game.gif This is a clip from Japanese variety show AKBingo! in which the contestants are trying to blow a cockroach into each other's mouths. That is like, way more interesting than thumb wrestling. Man, that girl on the right -- I think it actually gets blown straight down her throat. How long do you think a cockroach can live in a human stomach? "For as long as it takes to puke back up." That's what I thought too. You know I've actually eaten cockroaches before, except they were cooked. Well, technically just heated over my apartment's radiator until most of their legs stopped moving. I'm writing a book called The Modern Hobo. Chapter 1: Where To Safely Sleep In Public. Nowhere, everywhere is dangerous, end of chapter. Chapter 2: So, You're Thinking About Getting A Pet. Pfft, writing books is easy. Keep going for the whole video. Then play yourself with a friend and a cricket!
07 May 17:05

7-Year Old Writes George Lucas To Change The Rules So Jedis Can Get Married, So He Can Get Married

danipretto

awwwwww

jedi-marriage-letter-1.jpg jedi-marriage-letter-2.jpg 7-year old Colin Gilpatric recently wrote George Lucas asking him to change the rules so Jedis can get married, so that he can get married in the future without having to become a Sith. Obviously, because George Lucas has absolutely no problem throwing traditional Star Wars canon into a CG Sarlaac pit where Greedo shot first, LucasFilm agreed to the changes. Admittedly, I doubt George was even aware of the request and the response was created by LucasFilm PR, who did a wonderful job fulfilling a young boy's dreams. I dunno, maybe I'm just still a little bitter George Lucas never responded to my request to CG my face onto each side of Princess Leia's golden bikini top during the sail barge scene in the Blu-Ray re-release of Return of the Jedi. I COULD HAVE BEEN A STAR. Keep going for a picture of the bonus swag LucasFilm sent, as well as a video of Colin opening the package and another of him battling Darth Vader during Disney Star Wars Weekends.
05 May 13:54

Bye Felicia: Break Up Beans Grow To Read 'It's Over'

danipretto

terrible! how long would this take to play out?

break-up-beans.jpg Break Up Beans are $5 Lima bean plants that have had the seeds engraved with 'It's Over' and 'Let's Be Friends', so the phrases appear on the plant's first set of leaves. They also come in 'Be Mine', 'I Love You', 'Forever Yours', 'Happy Birthday', 'Best Friends', 'Get Well', 'Special Grandson', 'Special Granddaughter', 'Merry Christmas, 'Jesus Loves You', 'God Loves You' and 'I'm Sorry' varieties. So if you were ever wondering if there's a novelty Lima bean for every occasion: yes, there is. Hopefully there aren't any mix-ups at the bean factory or things could get awkward. The beans take about five days to sprout and show their message, so if you're growing the Break Up Beans you can use that time to quietly gather your things and be ready to make your escape. Still, getting broken up with by Lima bean? That's pretty cold. Even colder? Just texting the picture above to your soon-to-be ex with "Was gonna get you these, but $5 is $5 and I've got a new life to live." Or texting that emoji of the couple holding hands with an arrow pointing to them and "NOT US." Thanks to Greg M, who tried to grow Break Up Beans to break up with a girlfriend but he didn't water them enough and they never sprouted and now they're married.
05 May 13:36

catsbeaversandducks: Shoulder ChickensPossibly the best thing...

danipretto

better than baguetting


http://imgur.com/ziKk8rI


http://imgur.com/BG0Witf


http://imgur.com/3ajh7LB


http://imgur.com/22NbQka


http://i.imgur.com/vrmP3vI.jpg


http://imgur.com/gallery/KZJGE


http://imgur.com/3rwQPil


http://imgur.com/gallery/znOVmv9


http://imgur.com/6oKvVdB


http://i.imgur.com/3yd2FpD.jpg

catsbeaversandducks:

Shoulder Chickens

Possibly the best thing on the Internet right now.

(photos via Imgur)

02 May 21:20

Daily Travel Startup Watch: Tripovo, Amons and More

by Dan Peltier, Skift
danipretto

noted

Tripovo

Tripovo lets travelers book low cost-flights in Southeast Asia. Tripovo



Skift Take: These are the newest travel startups from Angel List vying for travelers’ interest and investors’ attention.

— Dan Peltier

Every day we alert our readers of new startups in the travel industry being listed on AngelList, as an early information service for those who keep track of such things. Every weekday, there will be a list of these newbies, along with each of their mini-profiles.

28 Apr 18:45

Grilled Fennel with Parmesan and Lemon

by Skinnytaste Gina
danipretto

yes please

Grilled Fennel with Parmesan and Lemon – my favorite way to eat fennel!


Grilled fennel with lemon, olive oil and shaved parmesan is my FAVORITE way to eat fennel. If you think you're not a fennel fan, this is the recipe that may change your mind!

When raw, it has a licorice-like taste I'm not a fan of, but when you grill it, the flavor changes completely, and has more of a mild taste like a bok choy.

The charred edges, drizzled with olive oil and lemon juice and finished with shaved Parmigiano Reggiano is my new favorite way to prepare it. You can serve this as a side dish for four, or have it as a warm salad for two. You can do this indoors on a grill pan, or make it outside on the grill.

Grilled Fennel with Parmesan and Lemon – my favorite way to eat fennel!



Click Here To See The Full Recipe...
27 Apr 19:41

Hands-Free Phone Holder Looks Like Giant Swan Head Extending From Your Crotch

danipretto

love japan

hands-free-phone-holding-swan.jpg This is a commercial from Japanese anime network Animax for a hands-free phone holder that looks like a swan head protruding from your crotch. It also looks like a giant penis. Apparently the commercial was made for April Fools' Day, although I can't imagine anybody actually thinking this was a real product. Except me. I just spent like an hour Google Translating a bunch of Japanese websites trying to find out how to buy one. Could you imagine riding the bus wearing this thing? NOBODY would sit next to you. You might even get your own row. That's it, I'm making my own. Except mine's gonna be an elephant trunk. No, a giraffe head. Wait -- octopus tentacle, final answer. "Please tell me you're not just gonna epoxy a bunch of suction cups to your penis." Epoxy? You're crazy. I'm gonna use my hot glue gun. Hit the jump to watch the commercial.
27 Apr 19:36

mllescarlet: No that’s perfect



mllescarlet:

No that’s perfect

27 Apr 12:05

4gifs: Come at me bro! Wait, I was kidding! [video]

danipretto

too cute



4gifs:

Come at me bro! Wait, I was kidding! [video]

27 Apr 12:03

WTF IS THAT?!: Curious Penguin Suddenly Not So Cute

danipretto

mind blown. so much disappointment. i thought these guys were just a bunch of happy feet.

angry-penguin.jpg In I'll never look at penguins the same way again news, this is a shot of an Adélie penguin in Antarctica trying to take a bite of photographer Gordon Tait's camera. I never knew penguin's mouths were so full of scary. I guess those fish don't chew themselves up. And neither do chicken fingers, which is why my mom has to cut them into little bites for me now so I won't choke. I almost died at TGI Fridays so many times before that. Thanks to KM, who's smart enough to know those aren't actually teeth, they're soft spines that help guide prey, which the penguins swallow whole, into their stomach. You just got learnt!
20 Apr 23:50

Awwww, fee fees. #sadtrombone #THECLOUDISALIE (at Teh Interwebs)

danipretto

too good



Awwww, fee fees. #sadtrombone #THECLOUDISALIE (at Teh Interwebs)

20 Apr 21:40

Insane Stunt Kite Pilot Taunts Kid With His Skills

danipretto

whoa. mad skillz

kite-skills.gif This is a video shot on Huntington Beach of a stunt kite pilot taunting a kid with his insane kite control skills. I didn't even know half of those moves were possible to perform with a kite. And apparently neither did Benjamin Franklin, which is why his bag of kite tricks consisted entirely of trying to electrocute himself to death. Keep going for the video, then let's go fly a kite, up to the highest height.
20 Apr 21:23

Photo

danipretto

want



20 Apr 21:20

micdotcom: Real students’ responses to what #IWishMyTeacherKnew...

danipretto

don't look if you cry easily. like me. these are heart breaking.











micdotcom:

Real students’ responses to what #IWishMyTeacherKnew will break your heart 

Kyle Schwartz asked third-graders in her Denver classroom to write her notes about things they wish she understood about their lives. Schwartz told ABC News she knew her students came from underprivileged homes but wanted to truly understand how that affected their lives and education. The movement has now spread across the country.

20 Apr 21:18

Maureen Dowd's terrible Hillary Clinton column shows the impossible demands all women face

by Amanda Taub

Like most other women I know, for my entire professional life I have heard an annoying, critical voice in my head telling me that I was being a woman wrong.

Sometimes it tells me I am entirely too feminine: that my clothes are too girly, that I am too quiet and obliging in meetings, too willing to be deferential.

And sometimes it tells me I am failing to meet minimum required levels of girliness: that I ought to take more care with my appearance, be less insistent on having my own way, be more careful about interrupting colleagues to say what I have to say. The voice is impossible to satisfy; there is no pleasing it. I've just learned to live with the constant, undermining sense that there is some correct way of doing things that keeps eluding me.

The problem, of course, is that women face a dilemma: being ambitious and successful are not characteristics that are traditionally associated with femininity, but challenging those traditional gender roles often provokes a backlash. Either way, there's a risk that it will be a barrier to success.

We, as women, often find ourselves stuck between two bad options: embracing traditional gender roles and risking being perceived as lacking leadership skills and strength, or embracing ambition and power and risking making people uncomfortable and hostile. That annoying voice in my head is reminding me to navigate between those two unpleasant options. It feels mandatory, but also often impossible. And it's exhausting.

Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign offers a glimpse of a world in which we will no longer have to do that. Not because she will be such a shining example of female power that she'll singlehandedly shatter restrictive gender norms and brush their dust off her power-suited shoulders — although that sure would be nice! — but because her campaign is going to inspire such ridiculously gendered demands and critiques that we'll all be reminded of how silly they are, and that if we're going to succeed it will be in spite of those inner critical voices, not because of them.

Once those voices are out of our heads and onto TV screens and newspaper pages, it will be easier to expose their absurdity and give ourselves a break.

This weekend, for instance, the New York Times's Maureen Dowd appears to have let her inner femininity critic ghostwrite her column, to genuinely peculiar effect. Dowd's latest piece is devoted to telling Hillary Clinton that she has spent her life being a woman wrong, and that she will never be president unless she can manage exactly the correct amount of femininity on the campaign trail.

In Dowd's telling, Hillary lost in 2008 because she "campaigned like a man," and voted for the Iraq War in 2002 because she wanted to "project swagger," only to lose to a "feminized" Barack Obama.

But now, Dowd complains, Hillary has overcorrected:

She has zagged too far in the opposite direction, presenting herself as a sweet, docile granny in a Scooby van, so self-effacing she made only a cameo in her own gauzy, demographically pandering presidential campaign announcement video and mentioned no issues on her campaign’s website.

In her Iowa round tables, she acted as though she were following dating tips from 1950s advice columnists to women trying to "trap" a husband: listen a lot, nod a lot, widen your eyes, and act fascinated with everything that’s said. A clip posted on her campaign Facebook page showed her sharing the story of the day her granddaughter was born with some Iowa voters, basking in estrogen as she emoted about the need for longer paid leave for new mothers: "You’ve got to bond with your baby. You’ve got to learn how to take care of the baby."

This, apparently, is entirely too much femininity. Dowd thinks Hillary needs to find a "more authentic way to campaign as a woman — something between an overdose of testosterone and an overdose of estrogen, something between Macho Man and Humble Granny."

This is so ridiculous that I can't help but find it a relief. Hillary isn't "macho," as Dowd puts it; in fact, she is genuinely more hawkish than the rest of the Democratic Party. And she's no "docile granny," in Iowa or elsewhere — since when is paid leave for working women, which this country does not currently guarantee, some sort of softball issue?

And I can't do anything but laugh when Dowd suggests that Hillary should use the bossy and ambitious caricature of herself that Amy Poehler played on Saturday Night Live in 2008 as guidance for how to escape the bossy and ambitious caricature of herself that Kate McKinnon plays on SNL now.

This system is rigged. There is no way to win. Especially for those of us who have never been spoofed on late-night television at all — where do we turn for guidance? But what a relief to see that absurd, impossible standard shriveling in the sunlight.

So now when I hear that annoying voice telling me I should have worn bigger earrings or spoken with a bigger voice, I have a handy retort. "What are you worried about? That I might end up like Hillary Clinton?"

Because if she's what failure looks like, sign me up.

WATCH: 'How marketing influenced popular belief'
15 Apr 17:09

notalwaysluminous:mapsontheweb:Map of a survey asking the world...

danipretto

funny

tumblr_nli2fn9m8l1rasnq9o1_500.jpg

notalwaysluminous:

mapsontheweb:

Map of a survey asking the world who they sees as the biggest threat to world peace, 2013.

just gonna put this out there

15 Apr 00:49

Chicken has no meaning anymore

by HUGELOL
danipretto

such a great prank!

14 Apr 21:13

4gifs: Cat Ops. [video]

danipretto

go kitty go



4gifs:

Cat Ops. [video]

10 Apr 15:03

(photo by argueswhendrunk)

danipretto

awesome



(photo by argueswhendrunk)

10 Apr 06:08

9 things I wish I'd known before I became a stay-at-home mom

by Lisa Endlich Heffernan
danipretto

yikes

The one job I never imagined having is the one that I've held for the longest. When I had two very small children and was planning a third, I quit my job at the London office of an American bank and became a stay-at-home mom. Although I wrote while I was home with my sons, I spent most of my time taking care of them. This decision ran counter to everything I was raised to believe in the 1970s and ‘80s and everything I had done to prepare myself for adulthood.

In my world, if you went to school alongside the boys, and then worked alongside the men, you didn't give it all up because parenting small children working full-time turns out to be really tough. But give it up I did.

I was far from alone in my ambivalence about melding my demanding job and young family. Nationally, attitudes about working mothers with young children are still deeply conflicted, with only 16 percent of adults believing that the best situation for a young child is for a mother to work full time. One third of Americans believe that the best thing for a child is a mother who stays at home, and 42 percent believe that the ideal situation is a for a mother to work part-time outside the home.

The decision to stay home or stay at work is based on a deeply personal confluence of factors. I don't believe that one woman can suggest what is best for another. Speaking only for myself and taking a backward glance, here's what I wish I'd known before I decided to be a stay-at-home mom.

1) My confidence would take a big hit

Entering adulthood, I thought confidence was something that came from within, that our sense of self was developed in the rocky shoals of childhood and adolescence. While social confidence or feelings of competence might be firmly established by college graduation, I soon discovered that professional confidence is a voracious beast that needs to be fed a regular diet of success. As a stay-at-home mom, I had nothing to feed this glutton who soon went into terminal decline.

Even as I became more secure as a parent, more sure that I could successfully guide three boys from infancy to adulthood, I found myself increasingly less secure in my ability to accomplish things outside the domestic realm. My confidence took hits from all sides. First, there was the feeling that the working world had moved on and I had become dated. Second, there was the fear that no one would take someone whose career description was "mom" very seriously. Finally, I discovered when I went back to work after a couple of years and a couple of sons, everyone was so incredibly young. The people who were my age and had stayed at work had moved on well beyond me.

My confidence took another hit from an unexpected quarter. When your kids are tiny, you don't foresee the day when they will see you as something other than just their parent. Yet the day arrives when they remark positively on a mom who is a teacher, an executive, or a doctor. There is nothing quite as demoralizing as trying to convince your kid that you had once been something, done something. That you had once mattered in some very small way in the larger world.

2) My world would shrink

One of the greatest joys of being a stay-at-home mom is the rich community that exists among parents. Friendships can be deep, abiding and, if we are lucky, last many decades after the children who brought the friends together are out of the house. But let's be honest. Most of our parent friends will be moms, close to us in age, and because of the way housing and schools work, close to our socio-economic background. Staying at home with kids can lead to a situation where more and more of the people we come in contact with are like us.

Work, on the other hand, more often broadens our world. An office may be full of men and women of all ages and backgrounds. Working is more likely to bring a flow of new and different people into our lives far outside the bounds of the other parents in our kid's grade. Inhabiting the working world brings us into contact with a wider circle of people. Becoming a stay-at-home mom can throw that process into reverse.

3) I would cringe every time someone said, "So what do you do?"

Identity and work should, in a perfect world, each be standalone parts of our lives. But we don't live in a perfect world and so often find ourselves judged on what we do for a living. I love meeting new people but came to dread what I knew would be one of the first questions every time I met someone. Sure, you can talk about volunteer work, or what you used to do, or what you hope to do, or you can just shout, "I do nothing. Do you hear me? Nothing." But very soon it becomes clear that none of these things hold people's attention for very long. Who wants to be only what they once were?

The quick dismissal that stay-at-home moms get is not great from other women, but far worse with men. I've found that women love to find common ground with each other. But meet a man in any setting, tell him you stay home with kids all day and, unless he does the same, you have 60 seconds in which he will commiserate about how tough his Saturday afternoons alone with his kids are, before moving on to talk to someone else.

4) I would feel as though I had not set the best example for my kids

One of the abiding concerns of some stay-at-home moms is the fear that they are not setting the best examples for their daughters. By not using their hard-earned education in the manner it was intended, they feel that are giving their girls the message that the rules are different for women and that the hard work we expect of our girls might not be all that necessary. I thought I got a pass, at least, on this one. I have three sons and so I had imagined the message about men and work lay at my husband's feet. Oh, how wrong I was.

Either in a classroom or in an office, I want my sons to believe that the women among them are every bit their equals. Yet despite once holding the same exact job as my husband, the message I gave my sons was that men and women had different responsibilities and while both were challenging, one used education and was financially rewarded and the other was not. It was up to me to help inform their views of women in every aspect of their lives. There are no passes in parenting.

(Shutterstock)

5) Staying at home with young children is exhausting

Before I left my job, my husband and I would leave the house together every Monday morning with a huge sigh of relief. For the next 12 hours we would work, read, eat, and travel, without the constant demands of two children under two. During the day I would walk outside and grab a sandwich with a colleague or run a quick errand on my own. It was a blissful break from the House of Toddlers that I inhabited on the weekends.

For anyone who has spent most of their career working at an office where bathroom and coffee breaks are of your own design, the relentless pace of life with small children can be far harder than anticipated. Colleagues are happy to let you finish a phone call, email, or thought. Not so, small children. They wear you down and leave you drained with their constant need to activity and attention. No boss was ever so demanding.

(Staying at home does have its benefits, though. Pew Research shows that working moms get less sleep and less leisure.)

6) I would envy women who had found their own work/life balance

Envy is not a pretty thing. But seeing the working moms every morning at school drop-off, it is hard not to be a bit wistful. For me it started with the outfit. Yoga pants and sweatshirts feel great until you look at a woman who has done her hair and is wearing adult clothing. It is not simply the superficiality of appearance but rather what the outfit signifies. It was hard not to feel that I had let an important part of life slip away.

Working moms made me feel bad about myself. I did not feel contempt for working moms (in the myth the press likes to fuel) but rather envy. They had figured something out that had escaped me. Here were my contemporaries, women of the same age and educational vintage. Yet they had made it work. They had great kids, who were usually my kids' friends. They had great careers. They had lives full of friends and some of them even baked. That killed me.

7) I had forever damaged my financial future

One morning I walked into my boss and quit. He was gracious, polite, and encouraging. I hugged a few colleagues, emptied out my desk and, by the following week, had moved from trading floor to playroom floor without a hitch.

Now, just try putting that process in reverse. It is a lot easier to become a stay-at-home-mother than to stop being one. When looking at the cohort of highly qualified women who leave the workforce, only about three-quarters return to work at all. And among those, less than half return full time. As Sylvia Ann Hewlett explains, "Off-ramps [leaving the workforce] are around every curve in the road, but once a woman has taken one, on-ramps are few and far between — and extremely costly."

Staying home is a massive economic risk for almost any woman. By taking a career break of any substantial length of time, women risk a permanent impairment to their lifetime earnings.

Readers of my articles and blog have flooded me with stories of their regret at being stay-at-home moms. Many had spouses who lost their jobs and were unable to support the entire family on their now-diminished income. Some found that their husbands began to resent having the entire family budget resting on his shoulders. The most painful stories that readers shared over and over are those of divorce. Each story is different, but all are a variation on the theme of husband and wife agreeing to split life's responsibilities and that agreement not lasting because the marriage did not survive. Women in their 40s and 50s find themselves facing a job market for which they are unprepared and a divorce settlement which is inadequate to support them. The regrets these women feel, at allowing themselves to become financially dependent while diminishing their own work in the job market, are excruciating.

(Shutterstock)

8) I would love the time spent with my sons

No one needs to tell a parent that the days of having their kids at home are numbered. From their infancy it seems as though the universe switches to fast forward. The urge to spend this time with them is a powerful force that plays on both mothers and fathers. Pew Research found that half of all fathers say that it is tough to balance work and parenthood. 46 percent of dads said that they did not spend enough time with their children (versus 23 percent of mothers). The time I spent at home with them was a gift for which I will never be able to express the full depth of my gratitude.

So, I do not regret time spent with my kids, not for a second. Were the years wasted? Of course not. But I regret leaving the workforce, almost every day. I wish someone had told me that it is possible to regret something and be glad that you did it all at the same time.

9) Everything has its price

I know, it's obvious, no free lunch and all. But the price of being a stay-at-home mom is not so easy to evaluate until after you have paid it. Leaving the workforce gave me the freedom to get things done as and when I wished. Sure, there was the tyranny of the school schedules and the needs of three small people, but in the end I had flexibility with my time that the workplace does not afford. I forfeited professional accomplishments to spend a lot more time with three of the people I love most in this world.

Many women quit their jobs because their after-tax income barely clears their babysitter's. When they look at the economics of working and combine it with the knowledge that they are missing the crucial baby years that they can never get back, walking away from a job starts to look like a real option.

But I think both of these assumptions have within them great fallacies. The economic calculus of working may look bleak for a woman in the early or early-mid phase of her career when totting up the cost of childcare. But unless she believes that her salary will be static, the calculation must include expected future earnings (which might be considerably greater) and the enormous potential cost to those future earnings of years out of the workforce.

It can be hard to see that the chaotic, I-cannot-handle-this years would be short, and soon life would be very different. Parenting intensity is U shaped. There is a great deal of work or focus needed in the earliest years and the teen years, but in the overall scope of a lifetime of work, these periods are short. Leaving the workforce entirely is a solution with enduring consequences to a problem that turns out to be temporary.

It is all too easy, at the moment when we are making this decision, to believe we have fully considered the cost of staying home. But that cost is revealed over time, unknowable until it is being paid.


First Person is Vox's home for compelling, provocative narrative essays. Do you have a story to share? Read our submission guidelines, and pitch us at firstperson@vox.com.

10 Apr 06:07

James Cameron launches America’s first vegan elementary school

by Catherine Winter-Hebert
danipretto

what? why?

james-cameron-americas-first-vegan-school

Known for directing films such as Avatar and Titanic, James Cameron has another blockbuster of a project on the horizon: a fully vegan elementary school. Muse School, a private elementary school in Calabasas, California, was founded by Cameron’s wife and her sister, and it will be offering solely plant-based meals in its cafeteria by the fall term of 2015.

James Cameron, Muse School, vegan school, vegan elementary school, Muse, Muse vegan school, America's first vegan school James Cameron, Muse School, vegan school, vegan elementary school, Muse, Muse vegan school, America's first vegan school James Cameron, Muse School, vegan school, vegan elementary school, Muse, Muse vegan school, America's first vegan school

Read the rest of James Cameron launches America’s first vegan elementary school


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Post tags: America's first vegan school, environmental school, james cameron, muse, Muse School, Muse vegan school, Rebecca Amis, Suzy Amis Cameron, vegan elementary school, vegan school, vegan school California, vegan school USA








08 Apr 18:30

GOODS | Minami Hosting Night Of Renowned Hakkaisan Sake & Freshly Shucked Oysters

by Scout Magazine
danipretto

@craig - last chance. miki emailed me yesterday.

hakkaisansake

The GOODS from Minami

Vancouver, BC | Prepare to slurp back some sweet and briny oysters on the half shell with glasses of Hakkaisan sake as Yaletown’s Minami Restaurant (1118 Mainland Street) hosts a special evening of tasting on Thursday, April 16, 2015. From 6pm to 8pm, diners can expect to hear sake stories from Aburi Restaurants’ sake specialist Miki Ellis and That’s Life Gourmet’s Mariko Tajiri, all while mingling with Hakkaisan Brewery President Jiro Nagumo, Export Manager Suguru Nakajima, and Sake Samurai Timothy Sullivan as they impart their experience with pairing sake with a variety of oysters.

“We are honoured and thrilled to welcome Hakkaisan’s Nagumo-san, Nakajima-san, and Timothy to make this an unforgettable event for all in attendance,” explains Ellis, the youngest Certified Advanced Sake Professional in North America. “The sold out sake event we did last month with cheese pairings was a huge success. I’m looking forward to seeing how everything comes together for an evening of pure decadence with the exquisite pairings of oysters and the amazing craft sakes of Hakkaisan Brewery.”

Hakkaisan is a renowned sake brand from the Niigata Prefecture in Japan. Its sake is recognized for its smooth, clean, and crisp flavours, pairing well with many different kinds of food. The sake line-up for this special evening includes Hakkaisan’s most popular: Daiginjo, Junmai Ginjo, and Sparkling Nigori.

The delectable oyster pairings will include a diverse range including Kumamoto, Komo Gway, KwaK’wala, Beau Soleil, Royal Miyagi, and Kusshi.

Tickets are $45 (exclusive of taxes and gratuity). The event will take place in Minami’s Blue Ocean private room or patio, if weather permits. Limited tickets are available by visiting Minami Restaurant (1118 Mainland Street), calling 604-685-8080, or emailing RSVP [at] aburirestaurants.com.

Details


1118 Mainland Street | Vancouver BC | V6B 2T9
Reservations: 604-685.8080
Email: info@minamirestaurant.com
Web: www.minamirestaurant.com | Twitter | Facebook
Parking: Valet parking is available at dinner service for $11.00
Private Dining: Blue Ocean Room (40 seated, 65 standing) and Blue Wave Room (14 seated)
Patio, bar and lounge seating

Gallery

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  • Minami_Opening_large_img14

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HOURS

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Dinner: 5pm-10pm, Sun-Thurs | 10pm-10:30pm, Bar Bites | 5pm-10:30pm, Fri-Sat | 10:30pm-11pm, Bar Bites
Lunch: 11:30am-3pm, Mon-Fri | 3pm-5pm, Bar Bites

The TEAM

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wner, Seigo Nakamura
Director of Operations, Mike Deas-Dawlish
Corporate Chef, Kazuya Matsuoka
Chef de Cuisine, Alan Ferrer
Head Sushi Chef, Kazuki Uchigoshi
General Manager, Hideaki Saito
Assistant General Manager, Ashley Stark
Manager, Michael McDermott

ABOUT Minami

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Located in the vibrant neighborhood of Yaletown, Minami Restaurant delivers one of the most unique and innovative dining experiences to Vancouver. Minami follows the pioneering footsteps of sister restaurant, Miku for introducing the Aburi style or flame seared technique to Vancouver’s thriving sushi scene in 2008. Each piece of sushi is flame seared using a blowtorch and bamboo charcoal, giving it a smokey, melt in your mouth aroma. Aburi sushi requires no soy sauce or wasabi, as the chefs create specialty sauces using non-traditional Japanese ingredients to complement the flavor properties of each variety of fish.

From the kitchen, seasonal and regional ingredients, as well as Ocean Wise seafood options are integrated into dishes to reflect the diversity of responsible food choices. Traditionally trained Japanese chefs are inspired by global flavors and cutting edge techniques to create a new style of cuisine. The culinary approach evokes passion and beauty, as each dish is artfully plated on custom-designed Arita Yaki plate ware, hand picked by owner, Seigo Nakamura from the artisan town of Arita, Japan. Japan-Euro influenced desserts created in house by our pastry team creates the perfect ending to the culinary experience.

Minami restaurant offers a dynamic space for dining and entertaining, which includes two private dining rooms, a seated lounge, hidden sun-filled patio and a custom-built sushi bar. The clean and modern space is weaved together with touches of Japanese aesthetic, creating a culturally contemporary room for dining. Hailing from Kyoto, Japan, internationally renowned muralist, Hideki Kimura’s stunning and whimsical work can be seen on many feature walls, including both the Blue Ocean and Blue Wave private dining rooms.

The Minami bar features an extensive sake list created by a foremost sake expert in Vancouver, wine menu and an original cocktail program designed by the highly-acclaimed 2010 Vancouver Magazine’s ‘Bartender of the Year,’ Shaun Layton.

The post GOODS | Minami Hosting Night Of Renowned Hakkaisan Sake & Freshly Shucked Oysters appeared first on Scout Magazine.

08 Apr 18:04

The Ultimate Canadian Road Trip, As Determined By An Algorithm

by Jennifer MacMillan
danipretto

some day



Now this is a road trip.

Behold the ultimate cross-Canada journey according to an algorithm devised by Randy Olson, a computer science PhD candidate at Michigan State University.

Olson has previously used the algorithm to determine the optimal road trip across the U.S. and across Europe, so HuffPost Canada asked him to apply it to the Great White North too.

(Here's the full interactive map.)

According to Olson, this entire route is 16,226 kilometres long. It would take 8.13 days straight of non-stop driving to do the whole trek — or about 32 days, if you only drove six hours per day. (See the whole list of the stops below.)

Canada has the unique distinction of having an entire territory that is inaccessible by road.

So no matter how far you're willing to drive, you'll have to add a plane ride on to see every single province and territory.


British Columbia
- Stanley Park
- Haida Gwaii (ferry from Prince Rupert)

Alberta
- Lake Louise in Banff National Park
- Columbia Icefields in Jasper National Park

Saskatchewan
- Fort Battleford
- Wanuskewin Heritage Park

Manitoba
- Riding Mountain National Park
- Riel House

Yukon
- Dawson Historic Complex
- Kluane National Park

Northwest Territories
- Kittigazuit Archaeological Sites
- Wood Buffalo National Park

Ontario
- Niagara Falls
- Parliament Buildings
- Pukaskwa National Park

Quebec
- Old Montreal
- Parc national de l'Île-Bonaventure-et-du-Rocher-Percé

New Brunswick
- Hartland covered bridge
- Hopewell Rocks

Nova Scotia
- Cabot Trail
- Peggy's Cove

P.E.I.
- Cavendish and Green Gables
- Province House

Newfoundland and Labrador
- Signal Hill
- Gros Morne National Park

What did we miss? Share your favourite Canadian road trip stops in the comments below.

ALSO ON HUFFPOST:

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

08 Apr 18:01

SMOKE BREAK #1145 | Illustration Series On Obeying “The Ten Commandments Of Sushi”

by Scout Magazine
danipretto

these are strange but now i really want to go to a sushi restaurant where someone has to introduce me and you need lessons.

1-SKtYtaQ0GWjRS4TM3FMJvA

(via) We dig The Ten Commandments of Sushi, a series by New York-based writer Tom Downey with accompanying imagery by Japanese illustator Chie Ushio:

My first lunch at Yajima Sushi, in Tokyo, felt more like a kidnapping.

There were open spots at the counter. But the chef, Susumu Yajima, instructed me to take a seat nearby and wait. Eventually I was summoned to a place directly in front of him, and the attack began: Piece after piece in rapid succession, as Yajima barked orders at me.

“Eat now!” he said, milliseconds after passing me a glistening slice of buri(amberjack) atop shari (the finger of rice that forms the base of nigiri sushi). “Use your hand!” he upbraided me, as I reached for my chopsticks. He even instructed me to half-chew one piece before washing it down with sake.

Was it the taste of the fish, or some culinary variant on Stockholm Syndrome, that compelled me to return, and to keep returning? Either way, I fell in love with the low-ceilinged room, hidden in the basement of a nondescript building off a main road in Shibuya. And I came to realize that Yajima’s bossiness was an integral part of the appeal.

During another meal, as I followed his orders to the letter, I began to suspect there was something profound behind these edicts. Some were rudimentary and fairly common; others were unique to him; still others recalled sushi’s origins as Edo-era street food.

When I summoned up the courage to ask about this, his wife, Yoshiko, yelled from the kitchen: “He’s just strange!” Yajima nodded. “I’m just forcing my way onto my customers,” he agreed. But slowly, over the course of several meals, he opened up and told me more: How he’d become a chef; how he and his wife had run their sushi-ya together for almost 34 years; and how the story of his life, and this place, was encapsulated in his Ten Commandments of Sushi.

Read the entirety here.

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TAKE ANOTHER BREAK

The post SMOKE BREAK #1145 | Illustration Series On Obeying “The Ten Commandments Of Sushi” appeared first on Scout Magazine.

08 Apr 18:01

Guy Does 138MPH On A Mountain Bike In French Alps

danipretto

worth a click to see his ridiculously aero dynamic outfit when walking. he looks old (he is 55). and how does he stop?

mountain-bike-speed-record.jpg This is a video of French cyclist Eric Barone beating his previous downhill mountain bike speed record by hitting 138.752mph (223.3km/h) on a specially designed bike in the French Alps. Plus he's wearing a speed suit that makes him look like a giant cherry flavored condom. For reference, 138mph is faster than the terminal velocity of a skydiver falling with a belly-down orientation (they top out at around 120mph, falling head-down they can reach 150 - 200mph). Still, as impressive as hitting 138mph on a mountain bike is, I can't help but feel like he cheated by not picking a course through the woods. Keep going for the video.
08 Apr 17:59

Iconic VW Camper van to be revived as a battery-electric vehicle

by Charley Cameron
danipretto

awesome and great positioning

Volkswagen Westfalia Camper, volkswagen, camper van, electric car, electric vehicle, electric camper, classic cars, electric car concept, vw van, electric car concept, e car technology

Since its launch in the early 1950s, the Volkswagen Westfalia Camper has been an enduring classic, an icon of cross-country adventures and the traveling lifestyle. Production ceased in 2003, but speaking to Autocar at last week’s New York Auto Show, board member Dr Heinz-Jakob Neusser revealed that the company is soon to unveil a concept Camper that would revive the classic van as an electric vehicle.

Volkswagen Westfalia Camper, volkswagen, camper van, electric car, electric vehicle, electric camper, classic cars, electric car concept, vw van, electric car concept, e car technology volkswagen, camper van, electric car, electric vehicle, electric camper volkswagen, camper van, electric car, electric vehicle, electric camper

Read the rest of Iconic VW Camper van to be revived as a battery-electric vehicle


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Post tags: camper van, classic cars, e car technology, electric camper, electric car, electric car concept, electric vehicle, volkswagen, Volkswagen Westfalia Camper, vw van








08 Apr 11:43

carry-on-my-otp: If Stuntmen from the old movies don’t have...

danipretto

If Stuntmen from the old movies don’t have your full respect then I just don’t know what to say to you













carry-on-my-otp:

If Stuntmen from the old movies don’t have your full respect then I just don’t know what to say to you


08 Apr 05:52

Chretien remembers fight over Canadian flag design as he marks 50th anniversary with Trudeau

by Canadian Press
danipretto

canada is soooo young.

On National Flag Day of Canada, the reminiscences of a former prime minister who witnessed the emotional flag debates of the 1960s helped mark the 50th anniversary of the distinctive red-and-white emblem.

Jean Chretien joined Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau on Sunday to celebrate the milestone, sharing his insight into the political climate that led to the Canadian flag’s inception.

“Fifty years ago today it was cold. But if it was cold outside — because it was very cold on Parliament Hill — our hearts were very warm with pride as a new Canadian flag was raised for the first time,” he said to hundreds of people at the University of Toronto campus in Mississauga.

“I was there … when those who had voted for the flag got up to sing ”O Canada“ and unfortunately they were booed,” he said, adding that he saw MPs pushing and shoving each other after the vote.

Still, for Chretien — then a young MP, almost three decades away from leading the country — it was “a great day” of emancipation for Canada.

Trudeau spoke about the historical significance of the flag and the difficulties former prime minister Lester B. Pearson faced in making the bold new design a reality.

Chretien said the maple-leaf pennant has come to be a symbol of Canadian values.

“It is a flag that represents hope, represents generosity, represents sharing, represents trust,” he said. “We should all be grateful to Lester B. Pearson to have the courage to move.”

THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chris Young
THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chris YoungAudience members wave Canadian flag as they wait for the arrival of Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau and former prime minister Jean Chretien at an event to celebrate the 50th Anniversary of the Canadian Flag, in Mississauga Ont., on Sunday.

Chretien also slipped in a couple of jabs at the current Conservative government as he tied the flag to Canada’s international reputation. “It was a time that Canada was respected,” he said. “We were showing the world what it was to build a modern society with the diversity that we had.”

THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chris Young
THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chris YoungEve Adams, a former Conservative MP who recently crossed to the Liberal Party, sits in the audience as Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau and former Prime Minister Jean Chretien attend an event to celebrate the 50th Anniversary of the Canadian Flag, in Mississauga, Ont., on Sunday.

But “something happened” to Canada’s global image in recent years, Chretien said, pointing to Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s failure to secure Canada a seat on the United Nations security council.

“I was not very happy that day,” Chretien said.

The original flag flown over the Peace Tower on Feb. 15, 1965, was never given away.

It’s part of the House of Commons heritage collection and is on public display in Parliament’s Hall of Honour until March 1.

Harper said Sunday he would present 50 Canadian flags to 50 Canadians and organizations in recognition of their contributions to the country.

“The Canadian flag is a symbol of the values of peace, democracy, freedom and justice that define and unite us as Canadians,” he said in a statement.

“It is a common rallying point for great moments in our country’s history and a testament to our ingenuity and achievements, both at home and on the international stage.”

Gov. Gen. David Johnston also marked the anniversary Sunday by unveiling a commemorative coin and stamp in Ottawa’s Confederation Park.

“The national flag of Canada is so embedded in our national life and so emblematic of our national purpose that we simply cannot imagine our country without it,” Johnston said in a statement. “It stands for the people we are, the values we cherish and the land we call home.”

Johnston also passed along some words from the Queen.

“On this, the 50th anniversary of the National Flag of Canada, I am pleased to join with all Canadians in the celebration of this unique and cherished symbol of our country and identity,” she said.

© Ottawa Citizen

08 Apr 05:47

Did an artist put Monica's dress in the National Portrait Gallery's Bill Clinton painting?

by Andrew Prokop
danipretto

how can he get away with going to press with this?

The painting of former President Bill Clinton in Washington DC's National Portrait Gallery contains a visual reference to Monica Lewinsky's blue dress, artist Nelson Shanks disclosed in a new interview with Stephanie Farr of the Philadelphia Daily News.

Shanks said that painting Clinton was a challenge because he thinks Clinton is "probably the most famous liar of all time." Shanks acknowledged that "he and his administration did some very good things," but said, "I could never get the Monica thing completely out of my mind and it is subtly incorporated in the painting." He went on:

"If you look at the left-hand side of it there's a mantle in the Oval Office and I put a shadow coming into the painting and it does two things. It actually literally represents a shadow from a blue dress that I had on a mannequin, that I had there while I was painting it, but not when he was there. It is also a bit of a metaphor in that it represents a shadow on the office he held, or on him."

Indeed you can see the incongruous shadow, which distinctly seems to have the arm of a dress, in the painting here:

(Painting by Nelson Shanks. Image via Philadelphia Daily News)

Shanks also told Parr that "the Clintons hate the portrait" and "want it removed" from the Gallery (which is part of the Smithsonian Institution), though the Gallery denied that to Parr. Clinton's team hasn't yet commented on the matter. Read more from the Philadelphia Daily News here.

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