Weird News Story Du Jour One thread to bring them all and in the darkness ... wtf?
#521
Posted 24 May 2015 - 06:59 AM
Not so much weird as "keepin' it real, yo". Made me laugh anyway.
------------------------------------------------
http://www.news.com....8-1227367146408
Robert De Niro gives explicit advice to graduates
4 HOURS AGO MAY 24, 2015 12:35PM
Robert De Niro Cracks Jokes During Speech For NYU Grads
HOLLYWOOD heavyweight Robert De Niro delivered a heavy dose of reality to graduates of New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts — telling them, “You made it. And, you’re f**ked.”
The tough-guy actor — best known for his roles in “The Godfather: Part II” and “Goodfellas” — delivered his harsh verdict to an audience of aspiring actors, writers, directors and others who majored in the arts, saying their futures are far from a sure thing.
“You discovered a talent, developed an ambition, and recognised your passion,” he said at the ceremony, which was held at Madison Square Garden.
“When you feel that you can’t fight it, you just go for it. When it comes to the arts, passion should always trump common sense. Yeah you’re f**ked. The good news is, that’s not a bad place to start,” he said.
Other NYU grads had brighter prospects, he added.
“The school of medicine graduates, each will get a job,” he said.
Law school grads will too, he said, adding that if they don’t, “Who cares? They’re lawyers!”
But Tisch alums, he said, will be following a different path.
“A new door is opening for you. A door to a lifetime of rejection,” he said.
“It’s inevitable. It’s what graduates call the real world. … How do you cope with it? I hear that Valium and Vicodin work.”
This article first appeared in the New York Post.
------------------------------------------------
http://www.news.com....8-1227367146408
Robert De Niro gives explicit advice to graduates
4 HOURS AGO MAY 24, 2015 12:35PM
Robert De Niro Cracks Jokes During Speech For NYU Grads
HOLLYWOOD heavyweight Robert De Niro delivered a heavy dose of reality to graduates of New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts — telling them, “You made it. And, you’re f**ked.”
The tough-guy actor — best known for his roles in “The Godfather: Part II” and “Goodfellas” — delivered his harsh verdict to an audience of aspiring actors, writers, directors and others who majored in the arts, saying their futures are far from a sure thing.
“You discovered a talent, developed an ambition, and recognised your passion,” he said at the ceremony, which was held at Madison Square Garden.
“When you feel that you can’t fight it, you just go for it. When it comes to the arts, passion should always trump common sense. Yeah you’re f**ked. The good news is, that’s not a bad place to start,” he said.
Other NYU grads had brighter prospects, he added.
“The school of medicine graduates, each will get a job,” he said.
Law school grads will too, he said, adding that if they don’t, “Who cares? They’re lawyers!”
But Tisch alums, he said, will be following a different path.
“A new door is opening for you. A door to a lifetime of rejection,” he said.
“It’s inevitable. It’s what graduates call the real world. … How do you cope with it? I hear that Valium and Vicodin work.”
This article first appeared in the New York Post.
"Fortune favors the bold, though statistics favor the cautious." - Indomitable Courteous (Icy) Fist, The Palace Job - Patrick Weekes
"Well well well ... if it ain't The Invisible C**t." - Billy Butcher, The Boys
"I have strong views about not tempting providence and, as a wise man once said, the difference between luck and a wheelbarrow is, luck doesn’t work if you push it." - Colonel Orhan, Sixteen Ways to Defend a Walled City - KJ Parker
"Well well well ... if it ain't The Invisible C**t." - Billy Butcher, The Boys
"I have strong views about not tempting providence and, as a wise man once said, the difference between luck and a wheelbarrow is, luck doesn’t work if you push it." - Colonel Orhan, Sixteen Ways to Defend a Walled City - KJ Parker
#522
Posted 11 July 2015 - 10:56 PM
Due to a mixup at the hospital, two sets of identical twins are raised as two sets of fraternal twins. And don't meet each other until adulthood. This is awesome.
http://www.nytimes.c...-of-bogota.html
http://www.nytimes.c...-of-bogota.html
They came with white hands and left with red hands.
#523
Posted 13 July 2015 - 03:34 AM
Older news, but entertaining digests and there is one every week.
The Pub is Always Open
Proud supporter of the Wolves of Winter. Glory be to her Majesty, The Lady Snow.
Cursed Summer returns. The Lady Now Sleeps.
The Sexy Thatch Burning Physicist
Τον Πρωτος Αληθη Δεσποτην της Οικιας Αυτος
Proud supporter of the Wolves of Winter. Glory be to her Majesty, The Lady Snow.
Cursed Summer returns. The Lady Now Sleeps.
The Sexy Thatch Burning Physicist
Τον Πρωτος Αληθη Δεσποτην της Οικιας Αυτος
RodeoRanch said:
You're a rock.
A non-touching itself rock.
A non-touching itself rock.
#524
Posted 19 July 2015 - 08:53 PM
This seems weird enough:
People In Toronto Made Memorial For Dead Raccoon After City Forgot To Pick It Up For 12 Hrs
People In Toronto Made Memorial For Dead Raccoon After City Forgot To Pick It Up For 12 Hrs
I'm George. George McFly. I'm your density. I mean...your destiny.
#525
Posted 19 July 2015 - 09:36 PM
Texas Pizza Worker Takes Smoke Break and Saves Kidnapped Child
I picture her with her cigarette dangling from her mouth the whole time...4 inches of ash built up, and then she karate chops the perp and puts out the cigarette on his forehead. That's how it happened!
I picture her with her cigarette dangling from her mouth the whole time...4 inches of ash built up, and then she karate chops the perp and puts out the cigarette on his forehead. That's how it happened!
I'm George. George McFly. I'm your density. I mean...your destiny.
#526
Posted 21 July 2015 - 09:21 AM
Play games, make a difference(?)
-----------------------------------------
http://www.bbc.com/n...siness-33519194
How playing computer games can make the world safer
By Paul Rubens
Technology reporter
Playing computer games can help make the world a safer place. Yes, really.
Maybe not blockbusters like Grand Theft Auto, but a new type of game designed to perform another function while you're playing it.
Take Binary Fission, for example. It challenges you to sort coloured atomic particles in as few steps as possible. It may seem like just another brain-teasing puzzle game, but you're actually helping to foil hackers and cyber-criminals while playing it.
How so?
Well, as you solve the puzzles you're actually helping to "verify formally" that an underlying software program is free from bugs and vulnerabilities that could leave it open to attack.
And as software is critical in the running of almost everything these days, from national energy networks to police drones, air traffic control systems to emergency services, formal verification is an essential process.
Binary Fission has been developed by SRI International, a non-profit research institute based in California, in partnership with the Air Force Research Laboratory and the University of California, Santa Cruz.
John Murray, a program director at SRI International, explains that the puzzles are generated automatically by the game using program code and data from the software that is being verified.
Sets of data - good and bad - are converted into coloured balls that are presented to the player - blue balls representing good values, and gold balls representing bad values.
The Binary Fission game helps verify that software programs are free from bugs
The player has to select combinations of "filters" generated by the game to separate the blue balls from the gold balls, and successfully doing so assists with the software verification process.
"When a player solves a puzzle in this way they speed up the verification," says Dr Murray. "It may be that one player on one level of the game comes up with the key pattern that helps complete the verification job."
Now this may not sound as exciting as Call of Duty: Black Ops, but Simone Castagna, a games designer and player of PC-based puzzle and shooting games, says Binary Fission and other verification games are "quite fun to play, and they're very similar to other puzzle games I've played."
She adds: "It's worth noting I was only told Binary Fission was a puzzle game, so I was surprised when I found out it had a research component to it."
The game is part of a crowdsourcing project funded by the US Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (Darpa), which is trying to address the fact that commercial off-the-shelf software typically contains up to five bugs per thousand lines of code.
The problem is that formal verification - providing mathematical proof that a piece of software is error-free - is a complex business.
"Formal verification is wildly expensive and very difficult," says Michael Ernst, a computer science professor at the University of Washington who is involved with the Darpa project.
"That's because you usually need a highly skilled, highly paid software engineer to carry out the process."
Tech companies, universities and games designers have collaborated on the games
There are "only 3,000-to-4,000 people who can carry out verification today," according to SRI's Dr Murray.
So harnessing the power of the crowd - a volunteer army of gamers - is one way to tackle the problem.
Many companies, including Google, Facebook and PayPal, already use a slightly different crowdsourcing technique to try to make their software more reliable.
They run "bug bounty" schemes that award money to anyone who finds and reports security vulnerabilities in their software. And some companies, such as Bugcrowd and Bugwolf, run such schemes on behalf of others.
The key difference is that while bug bounty programs may reduce the number of bugs in a piece of software, they can't provide a guarantee that there aren't more bugs yet to be discovered.
But making games that help with formal verification and are also fun to play has proven to be tricky, says Michael Ernst.
"We would have loved to have been able to pick up the idea of Angry Birds or Candy Crush and turn it into something that does useful work, but it turns out that you can't," he says.
"To encode the problems we are tackling, these types of puzzles would have had to have been huge - like a Candy Crush puzzle that had 10,000 fruits."
These specialist games can't simply copy the popular Candy Crush format, developers say
So far there are just six of these specialist games listed on Darpa's Verigames.com website.
Andrew Keplinger, president of Connecticut-based Left Brain Games and the designer of two other games in Darpa's project, had a similar experience.
"In effect, what you are doing is getting game players to do disguised work. We started off by applying the ideas of existing games like Candy Crush, or popular maze games, but what we found is that the underlying information that we needed to use just didn't work with this type of game," he says.
"So in the end we had to go in the other direction by taking the underlying science and seeing what we could do to make it fun."
In the future, SRI International's Dr Murray would like to develop a service so that any software developer could submit software and have it verified by a game.
"That could be a good business model because there is an enormous amount of critical software that needs to be subjected to verification," he says.
Could volunteer armies of games players help keep critical software up to scratch?
If he is successful, then the security of vital software used by large companies and governments around the world may end up being improved by hordes of computer games players simply having fun.
"And I used to tell students that video games are just meant to be fun and have no other purpose!" Dr Murray concludes.
-----------------------------------------
http://www.bbc.com/n...siness-33519194
How playing computer games can make the world safer
By Paul Rubens
Technology reporter
Playing computer games can help make the world a safer place. Yes, really.
Maybe not blockbusters like Grand Theft Auto, but a new type of game designed to perform another function while you're playing it.
Take Binary Fission, for example. It challenges you to sort coloured atomic particles in as few steps as possible. It may seem like just another brain-teasing puzzle game, but you're actually helping to foil hackers and cyber-criminals while playing it.
How so?
Well, as you solve the puzzles you're actually helping to "verify formally" that an underlying software program is free from bugs and vulnerabilities that could leave it open to attack.
And as software is critical in the running of almost everything these days, from national energy networks to police drones, air traffic control systems to emergency services, formal verification is an essential process.
Binary Fission has been developed by SRI International, a non-profit research institute based in California, in partnership with the Air Force Research Laboratory and the University of California, Santa Cruz.
John Murray, a program director at SRI International, explains that the puzzles are generated automatically by the game using program code and data from the software that is being verified.
Sets of data - good and bad - are converted into coloured balls that are presented to the player - blue balls representing good values, and gold balls representing bad values.
The Binary Fission game helps verify that software programs are free from bugs
The player has to select combinations of "filters" generated by the game to separate the blue balls from the gold balls, and successfully doing so assists with the software verification process.
"When a player solves a puzzle in this way they speed up the verification," says Dr Murray. "It may be that one player on one level of the game comes up with the key pattern that helps complete the verification job."
Now this may not sound as exciting as Call of Duty: Black Ops, but Simone Castagna, a games designer and player of PC-based puzzle and shooting games, says Binary Fission and other verification games are "quite fun to play, and they're very similar to other puzzle games I've played."
She adds: "It's worth noting I was only told Binary Fission was a puzzle game, so I was surprised when I found out it had a research component to it."
The game is part of a crowdsourcing project funded by the US Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (Darpa), which is trying to address the fact that commercial off-the-shelf software typically contains up to five bugs per thousand lines of code.
The problem is that formal verification - providing mathematical proof that a piece of software is error-free - is a complex business.
"Formal verification is wildly expensive and very difficult," says Michael Ernst, a computer science professor at the University of Washington who is involved with the Darpa project.
"That's because you usually need a highly skilled, highly paid software engineer to carry out the process."
Tech companies, universities and games designers have collaborated on the games
There are "only 3,000-to-4,000 people who can carry out verification today," according to SRI's Dr Murray.
So harnessing the power of the crowd - a volunteer army of gamers - is one way to tackle the problem.
Many companies, including Google, Facebook and PayPal, already use a slightly different crowdsourcing technique to try to make their software more reliable.
They run "bug bounty" schemes that award money to anyone who finds and reports security vulnerabilities in their software. And some companies, such as Bugcrowd and Bugwolf, run such schemes on behalf of others.
The key difference is that while bug bounty programs may reduce the number of bugs in a piece of software, they can't provide a guarantee that there aren't more bugs yet to be discovered.
But making games that help with formal verification and are also fun to play has proven to be tricky, says Michael Ernst.
"We would have loved to have been able to pick up the idea of Angry Birds or Candy Crush and turn it into something that does useful work, but it turns out that you can't," he says.
"To encode the problems we are tackling, these types of puzzles would have had to have been huge - like a Candy Crush puzzle that had 10,000 fruits."
These specialist games can't simply copy the popular Candy Crush format, developers say
So far there are just six of these specialist games listed on Darpa's Verigames.com website.
Andrew Keplinger, president of Connecticut-based Left Brain Games and the designer of two other games in Darpa's project, had a similar experience.
"In effect, what you are doing is getting game players to do disguised work. We started off by applying the ideas of existing games like Candy Crush, or popular maze games, but what we found is that the underlying information that we needed to use just didn't work with this type of game," he says.
"So in the end we had to go in the other direction by taking the underlying science and seeing what we could do to make it fun."
In the future, SRI International's Dr Murray would like to develop a service so that any software developer could submit software and have it verified by a game.
"That could be a good business model because there is an enormous amount of critical software that needs to be subjected to verification," he says.
Could volunteer armies of games players help keep critical software up to scratch?
If he is successful, then the security of vital software used by large companies and governments around the world may end up being improved by hordes of computer games players simply having fun.
"And I used to tell students that video games are just meant to be fun and have no other purpose!" Dr Murray concludes.
"Fortune favors the bold, though statistics favor the cautious." - Indomitable Courteous (Icy) Fist, The Palace Job - Patrick Weekes
"Well well well ... if it ain't The Invisible C**t." - Billy Butcher, The Boys
"I have strong views about not tempting providence and, as a wise man once said, the difference between luck and a wheelbarrow is, luck doesn’t work if you push it." - Colonel Orhan, Sixteen Ways to Defend a Walled City - KJ Parker
"Well well well ... if it ain't The Invisible C**t." - Billy Butcher, The Boys
"I have strong views about not tempting providence and, as a wise man once said, the difference between luck and a wheelbarrow is, luck doesn’t work if you push it." - Colonel Orhan, Sixteen Ways to Defend a Walled City - KJ Parker
#527
Posted 23 July 2015 - 12:20 AM
In other news, it turns out Ottawans really aren't as boring as we all thought ...
--------------------------------------------
http://www.news.com....y-1227452970378
Ashley Madison hacking scandal exposes Ottawa as the cheating capital of the world
3 HOURS AGO JULY 23, 2015 7:17AM
WHILE an estimated 1 million Australians were presumably nervous wrecks on Tuesday in the wake of the Ashley Madison data hack, there was another concentrated cluster of cheaters wringing their hands on the other side of the world.
One in five Ottawa residents are allegedly subscribed to the cheating website, according to figures provided by the Toronto-based company, whose slogan is “Life Is Short. Have an Affair”.
In February, 189,810 Ashley Madison users were registered in the Canadian city, which has a population of about 883,000. It’s the biggest affair city in Canada and potentially the highest globally per capita, Reuters reports.
Noel Biderman, chief executive of Avid Life Media, which owns Ashley Madison, told a Canadian newspaper earlier this year that Ottawa was the marriage infidelity hotbed of the world. He claims the top postcode for Ashley Madison members is Parliament Hill, the home of Canada’s parliament.
Mr Biderman said capital cities around the world tended to have higher subscription rates, due to “power, fame and opportunity”.
Ottawa marriage counsellor Nataxja Cini said the city was full of professionals with demanding careers, many in government, which could put a strain on relationships. But being part of a stable family was still seen as a badge of success, and so an Ashley Madison subscription may be preferable to a divorce
“In our buttoned-down city, it may not be acceptable to openly explore outside of a committed relationship,” Ms Cini said.
An Ottawa resident, who declined to give her last name, said she was not surprised by the news her city was a cheating capital.
“In a blue collar city, they’re not going to use a website, they’re going to do it at a bar,” said Kary, 38. “[In Ottawa], you can’t run the risk of someone seeing you at a bar doing that.”
Private investigators and divorce lawyers in Ottawa say they expect their phones to be ringing off the hook in the wake of the scandal.
John Sullivan is a private investigator whose company Triangle Investigations Agency primarily investigates adultery. He says the scandal is a “goldmine” for PIs, but would “ruin marriages all over the world, all over the country”.
“There’s a lot of very nervous people walking the street,” Mr Sullivan told The Ottawan Sun.
People who are suspicious their spouse is cheating on them hire a PI to accumulate evidence in case they divorce. “Where the information is helpful is it becomes leverage to negotiate a better settlement for the client,” Mr Sullivan said.
Avid Life Media said on Monday that an “unauthorised party” was able to gain access to its data through various unauthorised points on the website.
A group calling itself “the Impact Team” claimed responsibility and said it was part of an effort to shut down Ashley Madison.
“Shutting down AM … will cost you, but noncompliance will cost you more,” the statement said. “We will release all customer records, profiles with all the customers’ sexual fantasies, nude pictures and conversations and matching credit card transactions, real names and addresses.”
Avid Life said some personally identifiable information was posted online before being removed and apologised for “this unprovoked and criminal intrusion into our customers’ information”.
The company said it was now offering members a “full delete” of their profiles in light of the attack. Previously, members had to pay an approximate $US20 fee to remove their profile data.
WHY DO PEOPLE CHEAT?
Dr Helen Fisher is a biological anthropologist and human behaviour researcher who has studied romantic interpersonal attraction for more than 30 years.
She says while most people try to live monogamous lives, humans are built to have many partners.
“We make all kinds of decisions about how we’re going to lead our love lives; and the vast majority of people have found that it’s a whole lot easier, if you pick the right person and fall in love with that persona, to stick with that person, because the human brain is simply not built to share,” she told CNN.
Dr Fisher says we want the best of both worlds — passion and stability.
“We want a deep trust and attachment to somebody, we want to feel electric romantic energy when we’re with them and we want to crave them sexually, we want all three systems operating 100 per cent all the time,” she said.
“We want it all and we’re willing to walk out if we can’t get it from one person.”
WHY ARE WE FASCINATED WITH CHEATING SCANDALS?
We love a good liar and we love to take them down, relationship expert Dr Nikki Goldstein told news.com.au.
“You can go back to Jerry Springer and Maury Povich to understand our enjoyment of it, that moment when the woman raises a chair about to hit the guy. We are fascinated with people who lie and deceive the people that they love,” she said. “It’s scary, because everyone who is in a relationship goes, ‘What if that was my partner?’”
But while a cheating scandal is juicy from the sidelines, Dr Goldstein questions whether Ashley Madison’s members should be publicly named and shamed.
“There are so many different types of relationships these days. We have to be careful about jumping on the self-righteous high horse, because we don’t know if their relationship was open to other people, or if their partner knows and they’ve both decided to just deal with it and get on with their lives,” she said.
Dr Goldstein says she’s seen a lot of people turn a blind eye to their partner’s cheating, because they have a stable home life and don’t want to give that up.
“We can’t understand it completely and I don’t think it’s so black and white,” she said.
“Publicly naming and shaming someone you don’t know online is very different to say, discovering that your best friend’s husband is cheating on her and speaking up.
“Yes, we don’t want people feeling hurt and being cheated on, but there are so many different scenarios that an outsider cannot possibly know what’s right for the people on that list.”
--------------------------------------------
http://www.news.com....y-1227452970378
Ashley Madison hacking scandal exposes Ottawa as the cheating capital of the world
3 HOURS AGO JULY 23, 2015 7:17AM
WHILE an estimated 1 million Australians were presumably nervous wrecks on Tuesday in the wake of the Ashley Madison data hack, there was another concentrated cluster of cheaters wringing their hands on the other side of the world.
One in five Ottawa residents are allegedly subscribed to the cheating website, according to figures provided by the Toronto-based company, whose slogan is “Life Is Short. Have an Affair”.
In February, 189,810 Ashley Madison users were registered in the Canadian city, which has a population of about 883,000. It’s the biggest affair city in Canada and potentially the highest globally per capita, Reuters reports.
Noel Biderman, chief executive of Avid Life Media, which owns Ashley Madison, told a Canadian newspaper earlier this year that Ottawa was the marriage infidelity hotbed of the world. He claims the top postcode for Ashley Madison members is Parliament Hill, the home of Canada’s parliament.
Mr Biderman said capital cities around the world tended to have higher subscription rates, due to “power, fame and opportunity”.
Ottawa marriage counsellor Nataxja Cini said the city was full of professionals with demanding careers, many in government, which could put a strain on relationships. But being part of a stable family was still seen as a badge of success, and so an Ashley Madison subscription may be preferable to a divorce
“In our buttoned-down city, it may not be acceptable to openly explore outside of a committed relationship,” Ms Cini said.
An Ottawa resident, who declined to give her last name, said she was not surprised by the news her city was a cheating capital.
“In a blue collar city, they’re not going to use a website, they’re going to do it at a bar,” said Kary, 38. “[In Ottawa], you can’t run the risk of someone seeing you at a bar doing that.”
Private investigators and divorce lawyers in Ottawa say they expect their phones to be ringing off the hook in the wake of the scandal.
John Sullivan is a private investigator whose company Triangle Investigations Agency primarily investigates adultery. He says the scandal is a “goldmine” for PIs, but would “ruin marriages all over the world, all over the country”.
“There’s a lot of very nervous people walking the street,” Mr Sullivan told The Ottawan Sun.
People who are suspicious their spouse is cheating on them hire a PI to accumulate evidence in case they divorce. “Where the information is helpful is it becomes leverage to negotiate a better settlement for the client,” Mr Sullivan said.
Avid Life Media said on Monday that an “unauthorised party” was able to gain access to its data through various unauthorised points on the website.
A group calling itself “the Impact Team” claimed responsibility and said it was part of an effort to shut down Ashley Madison.
“Shutting down AM … will cost you, but noncompliance will cost you more,” the statement said. “We will release all customer records, profiles with all the customers’ sexual fantasies, nude pictures and conversations and matching credit card transactions, real names and addresses.”
Avid Life said some personally identifiable information was posted online before being removed and apologised for “this unprovoked and criminal intrusion into our customers’ information”.
The company said it was now offering members a “full delete” of their profiles in light of the attack. Previously, members had to pay an approximate $US20 fee to remove their profile data.
WHY DO PEOPLE CHEAT?
Dr Helen Fisher is a biological anthropologist and human behaviour researcher who has studied romantic interpersonal attraction for more than 30 years.
She says while most people try to live monogamous lives, humans are built to have many partners.
“We make all kinds of decisions about how we’re going to lead our love lives; and the vast majority of people have found that it’s a whole lot easier, if you pick the right person and fall in love with that persona, to stick with that person, because the human brain is simply not built to share,” she told CNN.
Dr Fisher says we want the best of both worlds — passion and stability.
“We want a deep trust and attachment to somebody, we want to feel electric romantic energy when we’re with them and we want to crave them sexually, we want all three systems operating 100 per cent all the time,” she said.
“We want it all and we’re willing to walk out if we can’t get it from one person.”
WHY ARE WE FASCINATED WITH CHEATING SCANDALS?
We love a good liar and we love to take them down, relationship expert Dr Nikki Goldstein told news.com.au.
“You can go back to Jerry Springer and Maury Povich to understand our enjoyment of it, that moment when the woman raises a chair about to hit the guy. We are fascinated with people who lie and deceive the people that they love,” she said. “It’s scary, because everyone who is in a relationship goes, ‘What if that was my partner?’”
But while a cheating scandal is juicy from the sidelines, Dr Goldstein questions whether Ashley Madison’s members should be publicly named and shamed.
“There are so many different types of relationships these days. We have to be careful about jumping on the self-righteous high horse, because we don’t know if their relationship was open to other people, or if their partner knows and they’ve both decided to just deal with it and get on with their lives,” she said.
Dr Goldstein says she’s seen a lot of people turn a blind eye to their partner’s cheating, because they have a stable home life and don’t want to give that up.
“We can’t understand it completely and I don’t think it’s so black and white,” she said.
“Publicly naming and shaming someone you don’t know online is very different to say, discovering that your best friend’s husband is cheating on her and speaking up.
“Yes, we don’t want people feeling hurt and being cheated on, but there are so many different scenarios that an outsider cannot possibly know what’s right for the people on that list.”
"Fortune favors the bold, though statistics favor the cautious." - Indomitable Courteous (Icy) Fist, The Palace Job - Patrick Weekes
"Well well well ... if it ain't The Invisible C**t." - Billy Butcher, The Boys
"I have strong views about not tempting providence and, as a wise man once said, the difference between luck and a wheelbarrow is, luck doesn’t work if you push it." - Colonel Orhan, Sixteen Ways to Defend a Walled City - KJ Parker
"Well well well ... if it ain't The Invisible C**t." - Billy Butcher, The Boys
"I have strong views about not tempting providence and, as a wise man once said, the difference between luck and a wheelbarrow is, luck doesn’t work if you push it." - Colonel Orhan, Sixteen Ways to Defend a Walled City - KJ Parker
#528
Posted 26 July 2015 - 10:59 AM
Holy fucking shit!
-------------------------------------------------
http://www.news.com....0-1227457651957
James Lawrence has just put his body through more pain than anyone should ever endure
3 HOURS AGO JULY 26, 2015 5:33PM
JAMES Lawrence. Sounds like an ordinary name for an ordinary guy, but what he’s just done is anything but ordinary.
The American set a new world record on Saturday when he completed his 50th full course ironman triathlon across 50 states in 50 days.
That’s right. 50 triathlons. 50 states. 50 days.
The father-of-four achieved the mammoth task when he crossed the finish line at the Electric Park in Lehi in his home state of Florida on Saturday afternoon. Dubbed “The Iron Cowboy”, Lawrence has been punishing himself by swimming nearly 4km, cycling 180km and then running 42km everyday for the past 50 days.
What possessed him to even attempt, let even finish, such an arduous task? Easy. His kids.
“It’s for my children. Everything I do, I do for them. I try to set examples for them. I try to set big goals and accomplish them,” Lawrence said. “I want to be around for them as long as I can, and this is my motivation to get up and do those things.”
The man from Lindon embarked on his adventure to raise awareness about child obesity in the US, wanting to highlight the importance of making healthy lifestyle choices. He also raised money for the Jamie Oliver Food Foundation, an organisation led by the professional chef that works in schools to provide people with better access to food education.
“There is a massive epidemic in this country. We’re obese, and it’s a problem. We need to make some serious changes in our lives,” said Lawrence. “We need to change the way we eat, we need to change our activity levels, and we need to change our lifestyles.”
Lawrence began his mission on June 6 in Hawaii, but he hasn’t always been racing solo. Each leg of his triathlons have been open for people to join, with more and more members of the public tagging along as his journey progressed.
“The crowds are getting bigger, donations keep coming in,” Lawrence said. “The support has been overwhelming and makes things a lot easier. It has far exceeded my expectations.”
As amazing as his achievement is, this isn't even Lawrence’s first world record. It’s his third.
Before his most recent accmplishment, he held the record for the most ironman races completed in a year (22 in 30 weeks in 2010), and one for the most ultra-distance triathlons in one year (30 in 2012).
-------------------------------------------------
http://www.news.com....0-1227457651957
James Lawrence has just put his body through more pain than anyone should ever endure
3 HOURS AGO JULY 26, 2015 5:33PM
JAMES Lawrence. Sounds like an ordinary name for an ordinary guy, but what he’s just done is anything but ordinary.
The American set a new world record on Saturday when he completed his 50th full course ironman triathlon across 50 states in 50 days.
That’s right. 50 triathlons. 50 states. 50 days.
The father-of-four achieved the mammoth task when he crossed the finish line at the Electric Park in Lehi in his home state of Florida on Saturday afternoon. Dubbed “The Iron Cowboy”, Lawrence has been punishing himself by swimming nearly 4km, cycling 180km and then running 42km everyday for the past 50 days.
What possessed him to even attempt, let even finish, such an arduous task? Easy. His kids.
“It’s for my children. Everything I do, I do for them. I try to set examples for them. I try to set big goals and accomplish them,” Lawrence said. “I want to be around for them as long as I can, and this is my motivation to get up and do those things.”
The man from Lindon embarked on his adventure to raise awareness about child obesity in the US, wanting to highlight the importance of making healthy lifestyle choices. He also raised money for the Jamie Oliver Food Foundation, an organisation led by the professional chef that works in schools to provide people with better access to food education.
“There is a massive epidemic in this country. We’re obese, and it’s a problem. We need to make some serious changes in our lives,” said Lawrence. “We need to change the way we eat, we need to change our activity levels, and we need to change our lifestyles.”
Lawrence began his mission on June 6 in Hawaii, but he hasn’t always been racing solo. Each leg of his triathlons have been open for people to join, with more and more members of the public tagging along as his journey progressed.
“The crowds are getting bigger, donations keep coming in,” Lawrence said. “The support has been overwhelming and makes things a lot easier. It has far exceeded my expectations.”
As amazing as his achievement is, this isn't even Lawrence’s first world record. It’s his third.
Before his most recent accmplishment, he held the record for the most ironman races completed in a year (22 in 30 weeks in 2010), and one for the most ultra-distance triathlons in one year (30 in 2012).
"Fortune favors the bold, though statistics favor the cautious." - Indomitable Courteous (Icy) Fist, The Palace Job - Patrick Weekes
"Well well well ... if it ain't The Invisible C**t." - Billy Butcher, The Boys
"I have strong views about not tempting providence and, as a wise man once said, the difference between luck and a wheelbarrow is, luck doesn’t work if you push it." - Colonel Orhan, Sixteen Ways to Defend a Walled City - KJ Parker
"Well well well ... if it ain't The Invisible C**t." - Billy Butcher, The Boys
"I have strong views about not tempting providence and, as a wise man once said, the difference between luck and a wheelbarrow is, luck doesn’t work if you push it." - Colonel Orhan, Sixteen Ways to Defend a Walled City - KJ Parker
#529
Posted 17 August 2015 - 04:31 PM
http://www.news.com....9-1227487492521
Esports introduces drug tests for professional gamers
6 HOURS AGO AUGUST 17, 2015 8:33PM
ATHLETES using prohibited drugs to gain an unfair physical or mental advantage has plagued sports for generations.
To combat the issue, many of the world’s leading sporting organisations have stringent drug testing procedures for the sole purpose of catching cheats.
The latest association to implement these procedures is the world’s largest competitive video-gaming organisation.
Yes, you read that correctly.
In an effort to clean up the top tier of its competition, the Electronic Sports League (ESL) will test video gamers for performance enhancing drugs at its upcoming events.
“Our main goal is and always will be to maintain the fair play spirit and the integrity of our competitions and we’re confident that the anti-doping policy is important improvements that will help us advance as a sport,” the Electronic Sports League said in a statement.
But, it’s not just one or two substances that will be the focus.
A partnership with the World Anti-Doping Agency will see ESL test gamers for the same drugs banned at the Olympic Games.
The extensive list covers a wide range of substances including androgens, peptide hormones, stimulants, diuretics, narcotics, and cannabinoids.
This means gamers who plan to jump on the juice to gain some extra button mushing power will have to reassess their tactics.
However, gamers that finetune their skills while smoking doobies in their living room can rest a little easier.
ESL said competitors were free to smoke outside of tournaments with testing for marijuana only running “from the start of the first day until the end of the last day of competition”.
WHAT IS THE REASON FOR THE BAN?
The implementation of such stringent drug testing for video gamers may seem extreme, but it is a necessity given the increasing popularity of the sport over the past five years.
Last year alone, the 2014 League of Legends championship attracted more than 27 million viewers on ESPN, which made it more popular than game seven of last year’s baseball World Series and the NBA Finals decider.
In addition to its climb into the mainstream, Esports offers lucrative prizemoney that far exceeds what is offered by some world’s biggest sporting events.
In fact, last week the winners of an international tournament for the video game Dota 2 shared in a prize pool of more than $A13 million.
With such large sums of cash on the line, organisers hope to provide a fair playing field for all those involved in the tournaments.
In hopes to protect the integrity of its competitions, the organisation had always prohibited the use of drugs, alcohol and other performance enhancers, but they had never physically tested for them.
This all changed last month when a professional Counter-Strike player made a shock admission.
When speaking to the media, Kory “SEMPHIS” Friesen detailed how he and other members of his team were using the psychostimulant Adderall during a major tournament in March, where players competed for $250,000 in prizemoney.
Following the claims, Esports kickstarted a policymaking process to adjust the rules surrounding drug testing.
“The popularity and visibility of esports has grown exponentially in recent years, but this combined with the increasing size of prize pools has also made the temptation of rule-breaking even greater,” it wrote in a statement.
“As the world’s largest and oldest esports organisation, ESL has an ongoing commitment to safeguarding both the integrity of our competitions and that of esports as a whole.”
HOW WILL IT WORK?
The Electronic Sports League will begin the testing at the world’s largest Counter-Strike: Global Offensive tournament, which begins this weekend in Germany.
In order to prepare the implementation of the new rules, the organisation supplied gamers with a list of all the banned substances, so they knew what drugs/medications to avoid.
Furthermore, ESL had to decide what the most effective method for testing participants would be.
“We initially announced we will be working with skin tests, but upon further investigation and consultation with the authorities, we came to the conclusion that saliva tests are better fit,” ESL wrote in a statement.
“Tests will be performed at our discretion at any time during tournament days and will take place in a designated testing area.”
As ESL One Cologne will be the first tournament to drug-test competitors, the organisation said it would only perform a select number of randomised tests.
“However, we don’t want to exclude the possibility of performing a larger number of tests among all/majority of players at a later stage,” ESL said.
“Should the testing policy and method change, we will inform the players accordingly.”
In the instance where a player has a legitimate prescription for containing one or more of the banned substances, they will need to provide organisers a letter from a physician explaining why they need the specific medication.
“They have to disclose this to us as soon as possible, but no later than the first match is scheduled to start,” ESL said.
Those found guilty of using illicit substances will face punishments including point deductions, disqualifications or even two year bans from all ESL events.
“We will look at each case separately and once again ensure player’s full privacy.”
Esports introduces drug tests for professional gamers
6 HOURS AGO AUGUST 17, 2015 8:33PM
ATHLETES using prohibited drugs to gain an unfair physical or mental advantage has plagued sports for generations.
To combat the issue, many of the world’s leading sporting organisations have stringent drug testing procedures for the sole purpose of catching cheats.
The latest association to implement these procedures is the world’s largest competitive video-gaming organisation.
Yes, you read that correctly.
In an effort to clean up the top tier of its competition, the Electronic Sports League (ESL) will test video gamers for performance enhancing drugs at its upcoming events.
“Our main goal is and always will be to maintain the fair play spirit and the integrity of our competitions and we’re confident that the anti-doping policy is important improvements that will help us advance as a sport,” the Electronic Sports League said in a statement.
But, it’s not just one or two substances that will be the focus.
A partnership with the World Anti-Doping Agency will see ESL test gamers for the same drugs banned at the Olympic Games.
The extensive list covers a wide range of substances including androgens, peptide hormones, stimulants, diuretics, narcotics, and cannabinoids.
This means gamers who plan to jump on the juice to gain some extra button mushing power will have to reassess their tactics.
However, gamers that finetune their skills while smoking doobies in their living room can rest a little easier.
ESL said competitors were free to smoke outside of tournaments with testing for marijuana only running “from the start of the first day until the end of the last day of competition”.
WHAT IS THE REASON FOR THE BAN?
The implementation of such stringent drug testing for video gamers may seem extreme, but it is a necessity given the increasing popularity of the sport over the past five years.
Last year alone, the 2014 League of Legends championship attracted more than 27 million viewers on ESPN, which made it more popular than game seven of last year’s baseball World Series and the NBA Finals decider.
In addition to its climb into the mainstream, Esports offers lucrative prizemoney that far exceeds what is offered by some world’s biggest sporting events.
In fact, last week the winners of an international tournament for the video game Dota 2 shared in a prize pool of more than $A13 million.
With such large sums of cash on the line, organisers hope to provide a fair playing field for all those involved in the tournaments.
In hopes to protect the integrity of its competitions, the organisation had always prohibited the use of drugs, alcohol and other performance enhancers, but they had never physically tested for them.
This all changed last month when a professional Counter-Strike player made a shock admission.
When speaking to the media, Kory “SEMPHIS” Friesen detailed how he and other members of his team were using the psychostimulant Adderall during a major tournament in March, where players competed for $250,000 in prizemoney.
Following the claims, Esports kickstarted a policymaking process to adjust the rules surrounding drug testing.
“The popularity and visibility of esports has grown exponentially in recent years, but this combined with the increasing size of prize pools has also made the temptation of rule-breaking even greater,” it wrote in a statement.
“As the world’s largest and oldest esports organisation, ESL has an ongoing commitment to safeguarding both the integrity of our competitions and that of esports as a whole.”
HOW WILL IT WORK?
The Electronic Sports League will begin the testing at the world’s largest Counter-Strike: Global Offensive tournament, which begins this weekend in Germany.
In order to prepare the implementation of the new rules, the organisation supplied gamers with a list of all the banned substances, so they knew what drugs/medications to avoid.
Furthermore, ESL had to decide what the most effective method for testing participants would be.
“We initially announced we will be working with skin tests, but upon further investigation and consultation with the authorities, we came to the conclusion that saliva tests are better fit,” ESL wrote in a statement.
“Tests will be performed at our discretion at any time during tournament days and will take place in a designated testing area.”
As ESL One Cologne will be the first tournament to drug-test competitors, the organisation said it would only perform a select number of randomised tests.
“However, we don’t want to exclude the possibility of performing a larger number of tests among all/majority of players at a later stage,” ESL said.
“Should the testing policy and method change, we will inform the players accordingly.”
In the instance where a player has a legitimate prescription for containing one or more of the banned substances, they will need to provide organisers a letter from a physician explaining why they need the specific medication.
“They have to disclose this to us as soon as possible, but no later than the first match is scheduled to start,” ESL said.
Those found guilty of using illicit substances will face punishments including point deductions, disqualifications or even two year bans from all ESL events.
“We will look at each case separately and once again ensure player’s full privacy.”
"Fortune favors the bold, though statistics favor the cautious." - Indomitable Courteous (Icy) Fist, The Palace Job - Patrick Weekes
"Well well well ... if it ain't The Invisible C**t." - Billy Butcher, The Boys
"I have strong views about not tempting providence and, as a wise man once said, the difference between luck and a wheelbarrow is, luck doesn’t work if you push it." - Colonel Orhan, Sixteen Ways to Defend a Walled City - KJ Parker
"Well well well ... if it ain't The Invisible C**t." - Billy Butcher, The Boys
"I have strong views about not tempting providence and, as a wise man once said, the difference between luck and a wheelbarrow is, luck doesn’t work if you push it." - Colonel Orhan, Sixteen Ways to Defend a Walled City - KJ Parker
#530
Posted 25 September 2015 - 01:11 PM
Oh no!
Yet another slippery stage ruins SISTAR members’ performance
http://www.koreaboo....rs-performance/
Recently, at “Hallyu Dream Concert 2015” SISTAR’s stage was ruined by yet another slippery stage. The members nearly fell and injured themselves on multiple occasion during the performance of their new song, ‘Shake It’.
On multiple occasions during the performance, Soyou and Hyorin nearly fell on multiple occasions when their high heels and the slippery stage made their footing unstable and caused them to slip wildly.
Like veterans however, the near slips did not at first phase the girls. After several occasions however, the girls failed to keep their composure and Hyorin and Soyou could not hold back their laughter and their live performance was slightly affected.
Yet another slippery stage ruins SISTAR members’ performance
http://www.koreaboo....rs-performance/
Recently, at “Hallyu Dream Concert 2015” SISTAR’s stage was ruined by yet another slippery stage. The members nearly fell and injured themselves on multiple occasion during the performance of their new song, ‘Shake It’.
On multiple occasions during the performance, Soyou and Hyorin nearly fell on multiple occasions when their high heels and the slippery stage made their footing unstable and caused them to slip wildly.
Like veterans however, the near slips did not at first phase the girls. After several occasions however, the girls failed to keep their composure and Hyorin and Soyou could not hold back their laughter and their live performance was slightly affected.
Attached File(s)
-
ohyeah.jpg (196.88K)
Number of downloads: 7
You’ve never heard of the Silanda? … It’s the ship that made the Warren of Telas run in less than 12 parsecs.
#531
Posted 25 September 2015 - 02:44 PM
Shin, you fiend
HiddenOne. You son of a bitch. You slimy, skulking, low-posting scumbag. You knew it would come to this. Roundabout, maybe. Tortuous, certainly. But here we are, you and me again. I started the train on you so many many hours ago, and now I'm going to finish it. Die HO. Die. This is for last time, and this is for this game too. This is for all the people who died to your backstabbing, treacherous, "I sure don't know what's going on around here" filthy lying, deceitful ways. You son of a bitch. Whatever happens, this is justice. For me, this is justice. Vote HiddenOne Finally, I am at peace.
#532
Posted 28 September 2015 - 11:13 AM
Oh my.
Debut novel 'Incarnate' now available on Kindle
#533
Posted 07 October 2015 - 03:06 PM
I think there's 14 too many guys.
http://www.news.com....3-1227561232135
Italian Stallion Rocco Siffredi launches Porn University and Siffredi Hard Academy reality show
OCTOBER 8, 201512:21AM
A PORN star who has made more than 1300 films has opened Porn University where aspiring X-rated stars learn all the tricks of the trade.
Rocco Siffredi, 51, is well-known in Italy where they call him the Italian Stallion. His films are known for their rough sex scenes but he has also managed to crossover into mainstream films as well.
University of Porn
Now, he has opened what he is calling the University of Porn to help aspiring adult film actors with his knowledge of the industry.
Of course, he has also decided to turn the concept into a reality TV show called Siffredi Hard Academy.
The Independent reports that the husband and father-of-two helped choose the 14 men and seven women for his ‘university’ from thousands of applications.
He will teach which sex positions work best for the camera and how to be “believable”.
Siffredi says like him many porn stars are normal people away from the camera — they just have unusual jobs.
“I have a normal life, for many, perhaps too normal. I do not forget where I come from. Fame did not make me lose touch with reality,” he said.
http://www.news.com....3-1227561232135
Italian Stallion Rocco Siffredi launches Porn University and Siffredi Hard Academy reality show
OCTOBER 8, 201512:21AM
A PORN star who has made more than 1300 films has opened Porn University where aspiring X-rated stars learn all the tricks of the trade.
Rocco Siffredi, 51, is well-known in Italy where they call him the Italian Stallion. His films are known for their rough sex scenes but he has also managed to crossover into mainstream films as well.
University of Porn
Now, he has opened what he is calling the University of Porn to help aspiring adult film actors with his knowledge of the industry.
Of course, he has also decided to turn the concept into a reality TV show called Siffredi Hard Academy.
The Independent reports that the husband and father-of-two helped choose the 14 men and seven women for his ‘university’ from thousands of applications.
He will teach which sex positions work best for the camera and how to be “believable”.
Siffredi says like him many porn stars are normal people away from the camera — they just have unusual jobs.
“I have a normal life, for many, perhaps too normal. I do not forget where I come from. Fame did not make me lose touch with reality,” he said.
"Fortune favors the bold, though statistics favor the cautious." - Indomitable Courteous (Icy) Fist, The Palace Job - Patrick Weekes
"Well well well ... if it ain't The Invisible C**t." - Billy Butcher, The Boys
"I have strong views about not tempting providence and, as a wise man once said, the difference between luck and a wheelbarrow is, luck doesn’t work if you push it." - Colonel Orhan, Sixteen Ways to Defend a Walled City - KJ Parker
"Well well well ... if it ain't The Invisible C**t." - Billy Butcher, The Boys
"I have strong views about not tempting providence and, as a wise man once said, the difference between luck and a wheelbarrow is, luck doesn’t work if you push it." - Colonel Orhan, Sixteen Ways to Defend a Walled City - KJ Parker
#534
Posted 29 November 2015 - 02:08 AM
Switzerland's Tinder stats would make for some interesting reading ...
-----------------------------------
http://www.news.com....7ccf5ec9418e848
The amount of people having sex with horses is on the rise in Switzerland
NOVEMBER 29, 201511:23AM
news.com.au
EXPERTS have warned horses are increasingly at risk of sex attacks amid a shock surge in abuse in Switzerland.
There were 105 cases of the maltreatment of horses in Switzerland in 2014 — 10 per cent of which involved people having sex with them, according to Tier im Recht, an animal welfare group.
“This rate is relatively elevated compared with other types of animals,” Andreas Rüttimann, a legal expert with the group, told reporters, The Local reported.
There are an estimated 110,000 horses living on 18,000 Swiss farms. At least one of the beasts are being sexually assaulted every three days, as animal rights workers tell of fears there are as many as 10,000 people in the country with a sexual interest in them.
The group said the number of unreported horse abuse cases is likely much higher than reported, given that so many people in the country are involved with equestrian activities.
Overall, there were 1,709 incidents of abuse against animals in Switzerland in 2014, up from 1,542 from the previous year, according to Tier im Recht.
While dogs remain the most common animal targeted by Swiss sexual abusers, horses are becoming increasingly popular as part of this worrying new trend.
-----------------------------------
http://www.news.com....7ccf5ec9418e848
The amount of people having sex with horses is on the rise in Switzerland
NOVEMBER 29, 201511:23AM
news.com.au
EXPERTS have warned horses are increasingly at risk of sex attacks amid a shock surge in abuse in Switzerland.
There were 105 cases of the maltreatment of horses in Switzerland in 2014 — 10 per cent of which involved people having sex with them, according to Tier im Recht, an animal welfare group.
“This rate is relatively elevated compared with other types of animals,” Andreas Rüttimann, a legal expert with the group, told reporters, The Local reported.
There are an estimated 110,000 horses living on 18,000 Swiss farms. At least one of the beasts are being sexually assaulted every three days, as animal rights workers tell of fears there are as many as 10,000 people in the country with a sexual interest in them.
The group said the number of unreported horse abuse cases is likely much higher than reported, given that so many people in the country are involved with equestrian activities.
Overall, there were 1,709 incidents of abuse against animals in Switzerland in 2014, up from 1,542 from the previous year, according to Tier im Recht.
While dogs remain the most common animal targeted by Swiss sexual abusers, horses are becoming increasingly popular as part of this worrying new trend.
"Fortune favors the bold, though statistics favor the cautious." - Indomitable Courteous (Icy) Fist, The Palace Job - Patrick Weekes
"Well well well ... if it ain't The Invisible C**t." - Billy Butcher, The Boys
"I have strong views about not tempting providence and, as a wise man once said, the difference between luck and a wheelbarrow is, luck doesn’t work if you push it." - Colonel Orhan, Sixteen Ways to Defend a Walled City - KJ Parker
"Well well well ... if it ain't The Invisible C**t." - Billy Butcher, The Boys
"I have strong views about not tempting providence and, as a wise man once said, the difference between luck and a wheelbarrow is, luck doesn’t work if you push it." - Colonel Orhan, Sixteen Ways to Defend a Walled City - KJ Parker
#535
Posted 29 November 2015 - 02:45 PM
Hopefully they will move onto emus, only to get disemboweled. Poor animals...
"You don't clean u other peoples messes.... You roll in them like a dog on leftover smoked whitefish torn out f the trash by raccoons after Sunday brunch on a hot day."
~Abyss
~Abyss
#536
Posted 13 January 2016 - 08:51 AM
What next, f**king trigger warnings if they realise they're about to come second? We're raising a generation of cotton-wool princesses who won't be able to cope when they hit the real world. HTFU.
Check out the tweets at the bottom of the actual article (which I couldn't copy) from Jay Bilas.
http://www.news.com....88f06b5b20a6e55
Outrage over new ‘sportsmanship’ rules at high schools
JANUARY 13, 201610:56AM
Everybody gets to win.
Tyson Ottonews.com.au
YOU might not be able to jeer players in the AFL, but at least footy fans still have the Mexican Wave, face paint and the ability to hold up signs.
The good people of Wisconsin in the United States aren’t as fortunate.
An incredible list of spectating rules issued by the state’s high school sport governing body has banned fans from bantering with rivals in any way.
The Wisconsin Interscholastic Athletic Association (WIAA) has created a social media storm after publishing its new sportsmanship laws for spectators and athletes, banning any negative comments towards the opposition.
The nonsensical document has outlawed the terms “overrated and “air ball”. Yep, the inmates are running the asylum.
The WIAA, which has copped backlash across the United States, states it published the list of rules to “help schools, students, parents, competitors, coaches and support groups identify inappropriate sportsmanship”.
What they actually did was turn high school sport into a police state, according to the backlash on social media.
Here is the strange list of phrases and actions outlawed by the WIAA, as explained in its “Defining Sportsmanship” document.
Booing of any kind is not allowed — disrespectful to officials, players and team. If errors in judgment are made, all are human and we must accept that. Individuals do the best to execute in a way they’ve been trained.
“Over-rated” chants are not allowed — directed in a taunting disrespectful manner at opponents and their fans.
“Scoreboard” chants are not allowed — directed in a taunting, disrespectful manner at opponents and their fans.
“Air ball” chants are not allowed — directed in a taunting, disrespectful manner at opponent.
“Nuts n’ bolts” chants are not allowed — directed in a disrespectful manner at an opponent.
“You, you, you” chants are not allowed — directed in a taunting, disrespectful manner at an opponent.
“We can’t hear you” chants are not allowed — directed in a taunting, disrespectful manner at an opponent or their fans.
“Nah, nah, nah, nah.. hey-eyyy goodbye” songs are not allowed — directed in a taunting, disrespectful manner at an opponent or their fans.
“U-S-A-, U-S-A, U-S-A” chants are not allowed — any acronym of derogatory language or innuendo directed in a disrespectful or inappropriate manner.
Holding up signs or props during opponent introductions is not allowed — directed in a taunting, disrespectful manner at an opponent.
Turning backs to the court or field is not allowed — directed in a taunting, disrespectful manner at an opponent.
Dressing in attire that is not associated with school spirit is not allowed — directed at drawing attention to one’s self and disrespecting the game.
Waving arms or making sudden movements is not allowed — directed in an intimidating or disrespectful manner at an opponent without regard for fair play.
Mexican Waves are not allowed — disrespectful to the game and the competitors by drawing attention away from the activity.
Body paint is not allowed — disrespectful to the event and others by drawing attention to one’s self and the inappropriateness of it in an education based setting.
Sorry kids, looks like there’ll be no fun allowed this year. Social media exploded when the story broke.
(Tweets)
Then there was ESPN analyst Jay Bilas, who seemed to take WIAA’s rules as a personal slap in the face.
(Hilarious tweets)
Check out the tweets at the bottom of the actual article (which I couldn't copy) from Jay Bilas.
http://www.news.com....88f06b5b20a6e55
Outrage over new ‘sportsmanship’ rules at high schools
JANUARY 13, 201610:56AM
Everybody gets to win.
Tyson Ottonews.com.au
YOU might not be able to jeer players in the AFL, but at least footy fans still have the Mexican Wave, face paint and the ability to hold up signs.
The good people of Wisconsin in the United States aren’t as fortunate.
An incredible list of spectating rules issued by the state’s high school sport governing body has banned fans from bantering with rivals in any way.
The Wisconsin Interscholastic Athletic Association (WIAA) has created a social media storm after publishing its new sportsmanship laws for spectators and athletes, banning any negative comments towards the opposition.
The nonsensical document has outlawed the terms “overrated and “air ball”. Yep, the inmates are running the asylum.
The WIAA, which has copped backlash across the United States, states it published the list of rules to “help schools, students, parents, competitors, coaches and support groups identify inappropriate sportsmanship”.
What they actually did was turn high school sport into a police state, according to the backlash on social media.
Here is the strange list of phrases and actions outlawed by the WIAA, as explained in its “Defining Sportsmanship” document.
Booing of any kind is not allowed — disrespectful to officials, players and team. If errors in judgment are made, all are human and we must accept that. Individuals do the best to execute in a way they’ve been trained.
“Over-rated” chants are not allowed — directed in a taunting disrespectful manner at opponents and their fans.
“Scoreboard” chants are not allowed — directed in a taunting, disrespectful manner at opponents and their fans.
“Air ball” chants are not allowed — directed in a taunting, disrespectful manner at opponent.
“Nuts n’ bolts” chants are not allowed — directed in a disrespectful manner at an opponent.
“You, you, you” chants are not allowed — directed in a taunting, disrespectful manner at an opponent.
“We can’t hear you” chants are not allowed — directed in a taunting, disrespectful manner at an opponent or their fans.
“Nah, nah, nah, nah.. hey-eyyy goodbye” songs are not allowed — directed in a taunting, disrespectful manner at an opponent or their fans.
“U-S-A-, U-S-A, U-S-A” chants are not allowed — any acronym of derogatory language or innuendo directed in a disrespectful or inappropriate manner.
Holding up signs or props during opponent introductions is not allowed — directed in a taunting, disrespectful manner at an opponent.
Turning backs to the court or field is not allowed — directed in a taunting, disrespectful manner at an opponent.
Dressing in attire that is not associated with school spirit is not allowed — directed at drawing attention to one’s self and disrespecting the game.
Waving arms or making sudden movements is not allowed — directed in an intimidating or disrespectful manner at an opponent without regard for fair play.
Mexican Waves are not allowed — disrespectful to the game and the competitors by drawing attention away from the activity.
Body paint is not allowed — disrespectful to the event and others by drawing attention to one’s self and the inappropriateness of it in an education based setting.
Sorry kids, looks like there’ll be no fun allowed this year. Social media exploded when the story broke.
(Tweets)
Then there was ESPN analyst Jay Bilas, who seemed to take WIAA’s rules as a personal slap in the face.
(Hilarious tweets)
This post has been edited by Tsundoku: 13 January 2016 - 08:52 AM
"Fortune favors the bold, though statistics favor the cautious." - Indomitable Courteous (Icy) Fist, The Palace Job - Patrick Weekes
"Well well well ... if it ain't The Invisible C**t." - Billy Butcher, The Boys
"I have strong views about not tempting providence and, as a wise man once said, the difference between luck and a wheelbarrow is, luck doesn’t work if you push it." - Colonel Orhan, Sixteen Ways to Defend a Walled City - KJ Parker
"Well well well ... if it ain't The Invisible C**t." - Billy Butcher, The Boys
"I have strong views about not tempting providence and, as a wise man once said, the difference between luck and a wheelbarrow is, luck doesn’t work if you push it." - Colonel Orhan, Sixteen Ways to Defend a Walled City - KJ Parker
#537
Posted 15 January 2016 - 03:13 PM
Tsundoku, on 13 January 2016 - 08:51 AM, said:
What next, f**king trigger warnings if they realise they're about to come second? We're raising a generation of cotton-wool princesses who won't be able to cope when they hit the real world. HTFU.
Check out the tweets at the bottom of the actual article (which I couldn't copy) from Jay Bilas.
http://www.news.com....88f06b5b20a6e55
Outrage over new ‘sportsmanship’ rules at high schools
JANUARY 13, 201610:56AM
Everybody gets to win.
Tyson Ottonews.com.au
YOU might not be able to jeer players in the AFL, but at least footy fans still have the Mexican Wave, face paint and the ability to hold up signs.
The good people of Wisconsin in the United States aren’t as fortunate.
An incredible list of spectating rules issued by the state’s high school sport governing body has banned fans from bantering with rivals in any way.
The Wisconsin Interscholastic Athletic Association (WIAA) has created a social media storm after publishing its new sportsmanship laws for spectators and athletes, banning any negative comments towards the opposition.
The nonsensical document has outlawed the terms “overrated and “air ball”. Yep, the inmates are running the asylum.
The WIAA, which has copped backlash across the United States, states it published the list of rules to “help schools, students, parents, competitors, coaches and support groups identify inappropriate sportsmanship”.
What they actually did was turn high school sport into a police state, according to the backlash on social media.
Here is the strange list of phrases and actions outlawed by the WIAA, as explained in its “Defining Sportsmanship” document.
Booing of any kind is not allowed — disrespectful to officials, players and team. If errors in judgment are made, all are human and we must accept that. Individuals do the best to execute in a way they’ve been trained.
“Over-rated” chants are not allowed — directed in a taunting disrespectful manner at opponents and their fans.
“Scoreboard” chants are not allowed — directed in a taunting, disrespectful manner at opponents and their fans.
“Air ball” chants are not allowed — directed in a taunting, disrespectful manner at opponent.
“Nuts n’ bolts” chants are not allowed — directed in a disrespectful manner at an opponent.
“You, you, you” chants are not allowed — directed in a taunting, disrespectful manner at an opponent.
“We can’t hear you” chants are not allowed — directed in a taunting, disrespectful manner at an opponent or their fans.
“Nah, nah, nah, nah.. hey-eyyy goodbye” songs are not allowed — directed in a taunting, disrespectful manner at an opponent or their fans.
“U-S-A-, U-S-A, U-S-A” chants are not allowed — any acronym of derogatory language or innuendo directed in a disrespectful or inappropriate manner.
Holding up signs or props during opponent introductions is not allowed — directed in a taunting, disrespectful manner at an opponent.
Turning backs to the court or field is not allowed — directed in a taunting, disrespectful manner at an opponent.
Dressing in attire that is not associated with school spirit is not allowed — directed at drawing attention to one’s self and disrespecting the game.
Waving arms or making sudden movements is not allowed — directed in an intimidating or disrespectful manner at an opponent without regard for fair play.
Mexican Waves are not allowed — disrespectful to the game and the competitors by drawing attention away from the activity.
Body paint is not allowed — disrespectful to the event and others by drawing attention to one’s self and the inappropriateness of it in an education based setting.
Sorry kids, looks like there’ll be no fun allowed this year. Social media exploded when the story broke.
(Tweets)
Then there was ESPN analyst Jay Bilas, who seemed to take WIAA’s rules as a personal slap in the face.
(Hilarious tweets)
Check out the tweets at the bottom of the actual article (which I couldn't copy) from Jay Bilas.
http://www.news.com....88f06b5b20a6e55
Outrage over new ‘sportsmanship’ rules at high schools
JANUARY 13, 201610:56AM
Everybody gets to win.
Tyson Ottonews.com.au
YOU might not be able to jeer players in the AFL, but at least footy fans still have the Mexican Wave, face paint and the ability to hold up signs.
The good people of Wisconsin in the United States aren’t as fortunate.
An incredible list of spectating rules issued by the state’s high school sport governing body has banned fans from bantering with rivals in any way.
The Wisconsin Interscholastic Athletic Association (WIAA) has created a social media storm after publishing its new sportsmanship laws for spectators and athletes, banning any negative comments towards the opposition.
The nonsensical document has outlawed the terms “overrated and “air ball”. Yep, the inmates are running the asylum.
The WIAA, which has copped backlash across the United States, states it published the list of rules to “help schools, students, parents, competitors, coaches and support groups identify inappropriate sportsmanship”.
What they actually did was turn high school sport into a police state, according to the backlash on social media.
Here is the strange list of phrases and actions outlawed by the WIAA, as explained in its “Defining Sportsmanship” document.
Booing of any kind is not allowed — disrespectful to officials, players and team. If errors in judgment are made, all are human and we must accept that. Individuals do the best to execute in a way they’ve been trained.
“Over-rated” chants are not allowed — directed in a taunting disrespectful manner at opponents and their fans.
“Scoreboard” chants are not allowed — directed in a taunting, disrespectful manner at opponents and their fans.
“Air ball” chants are not allowed — directed in a taunting, disrespectful manner at opponent.
“Nuts n’ bolts” chants are not allowed — directed in a disrespectful manner at an opponent.
“You, you, you” chants are not allowed — directed in a taunting, disrespectful manner at an opponent.
“We can’t hear you” chants are not allowed — directed in a taunting, disrespectful manner at an opponent or their fans.
“Nah, nah, nah, nah.. hey-eyyy goodbye” songs are not allowed — directed in a taunting, disrespectful manner at an opponent or their fans.
“U-S-A-, U-S-A, U-S-A” chants are not allowed — any acronym of derogatory language or innuendo directed in a disrespectful or inappropriate manner.
Holding up signs or props during opponent introductions is not allowed — directed in a taunting, disrespectful manner at an opponent.
Turning backs to the court or field is not allowed — directed in a taunting, disrespectful manner at an opponent.
Dressing in attire that is not associated with school spirit is not allowed — directed at drawing attention to one’s self and disrespecting the game.
Waving arms or making sudden movements is not allowed — directed in an intimidating or disrespectful manner at an opponent without regard for fair play.
Mexican Waves are not allowed — disrespectful to the game and the competitors by drawing attention away from the activity.
Body paint is not allowed — disrespectful to the event and others by drawing attention to one’s self and the inappropriateness of it in an education based setting.
Sorry kids, looks like there’ll be no fun allowed this year. Social media exploded when the story broke.
(Tweets)
Then there was ESPN analyst Jay Bilas, who seemed to take WIAA’s rules as a personal slap in the face.
(Hilarious tweets)
My triggers are basically In Flames songs from 2002 albums, fourth track specifically.
But I agree, the whole thing has become farcical (much as most things that seem to spill out of Mos Tumblrsley these days). What was once something used to provide a modicum of protection to those with genuine PTSD has become a privilege for privileged people to use whilst telling people to check their privilege.
Debut novel 'Incarnate' now available on Kindle
#538
Posted 16 January 2016 - 02:14 AM
http://gawker.com/ci...-dre-1753167738
City Official Quits After Asking Male Bus Driver to Dress Up as Adorable Little Old Lady
City Official Quits After Asking Male Bus Driver to Dress Up as Adorable Little Old Lady
They came with white hands and left with red hands.
#539
Posted 01 March 2016 - 09:25 AM
They came with white hands and left with red hands.
#540
Posted 01 March 2016 - 03:35 PM
'When I use a word,' Humpty Dumpty said, in rather a scornful tone, 'it means just what I choose it to mean — neither more nor less.'
'The question is,' said Alice, 'whether you can make words mean so many different things.'
'The question is,' said Humpty Dumpty, 'which is to be master — that's all.'
'The question is,' said Alice, 'whether you can make words mean so many different things.'
'The question is,' said Humpty Dumpty, 'which is to be master — that's all.'