Showing posts with label Rob Ford. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rob Ford. Show all posts
Friday, May 17, 2013
Rob Ford caught smoking crack on tape, his lawyer takes "deny everything" strategy to the next level
The headline about covers it on this one. Someone taped Toronto mayor Rob Ford smoking crack and is now selling it to the highest bidder (for some reason, there is a crowdfunded group attempting to buy it--actually, scratch that, there are at least five crowdfunded groups trying to buy it. Getting pretty tired of your shit, Indiegogo). At this point a number of journalists have seen and publicized the video, though the video itself remains unreleased. Rob Ford's lawyer responded to the allegations, wondering, "How can you indicate what the person is actually doing or smoking?" Apparently not recognizing the inanity of this line of thinking, he went on to ask, "Truly, what is reality? Does each of us not create our understanding of the world around us on a moment-to-moment basis, crafting a tapestry of perception that is unique to our own experience?"
Now, I have no clear evidence either way. I just want to ask one question: does the gif below depict the actions of a man who is not on crack? I rest my case.
If your desire for bizarre Rob Ford moments continues unabated, you may view a full list here.
Friday, January 25, 2013
It's almost time for the Super Bowl! Do you know how to watch a football?
Do you meet the following criteria?
The course is taught by a Diane Darling, so I decided to research (read: google) what else she does when she's not teaching people how to watch football. Unfortunately, obstacles!
Going to the site itself yielded similar results:
This exhausted my patience for research, so I gave up at this time. Returning to our original topic (how to watch football games), here's what Diane has to say about her class.
DISCLOSURE - This event was filmed in front of a live audience at the British Consulate in Boston, MA on January 8, 2013 at the chapter meeting of the Greater Boston ASTD .
With Super Bowl is around the corner, I decided to upload the class so you can enjoy right away rather than spend hours perfecting the video.
Diane, while we're on the topic of oddly specific how-to classes, would you be interested in my course on "How to use grammatically correct sentences in articles describing courses on how to watch American football games"? [editor's note: that sentence might be grammatically incorrect. If so, it's supposed to be ironic or something.]
Welcome to Water Cooler Football - where football and networking meet to have fun!
"To have fun" is a bizarre addendum to that particular sentence, because subjects, objects and verbs are things that matter.
You’re at a party with a football game on, people cheer and you have no idea what happened – do you feel left out?
Here's a free tip from me--if people are cheering, you can do one of two things to fit in. Either just cheer whenever they do, or remain silent and if anyone asks just say you're a Cleveland fan. They'll nod their head in a knowing and sympathetic manner and be none the wiser as to your football ignorance.
At a meeting someone says, “let’s do an end run” – do you feel lost?
Not as lost as mayor Rob Ford of Toronto feels when he tries to actually do an end run!
When you hear “football” do you think
people mean soccer?
That is an extremely odd question. If the answer to the question is yes, the question will make no sense. If the answer is no, it's such a mind-numbingly silly question that it still makes no sense. It's like a zen koan, if the word koan means what I currently believe it means, which I'd say is about a 50/50 proposition.
If you don't know how to watch a football, you maybe left out.
This is pretty much my favorite sentence of ever. Am I doing it right?
This can have a negative impact on your career and perhaps social life.
Forgetting to watch a football has certainly had a negative impact on Jermichael Finley's career! ZING
You'll also learn some best practices for networking. How to pick your events (aka "whether report")
Frankly, I have no idea what a "whether report" is, so I'm not even sure we're talking about football anymore.
how to get into a conversation, and .... how to get out of one.
That is the most ominous way possible to write that sentence. It suggests that any beginner can get into a conversation about football, but only the experts will be able to extricate themselves later. I can't tell you how many times I've seen a group of football novices start chatting, only to realize that they are stuck in the conversation forever.
Learn how to be a part of the game with tips and from Gene and Diane. (And wait until you hear how they met!)
- Live in the United States
- Work in a place where other people work also
- Have $50
- Don't know how football works
The course is taught by a Diane Darling, so I decided to research (read: google) what else she does when she's not teaching people how to watch football. Unfortunately, obstacles!
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Fucking robots! |
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Reading this aloud with the ellipses causes you to sound like Christopher Walken. |
DISCLOSURE - This event was filmed in front of a live audience at the British Consulate in Boston, MA on January 8, 2013 at the chapter meeting of the Greater Boston ASTD .
With Super Bowl is around the corner, I decided to upload the class so you can enjoy right away rather than spend hours perfecting the video.
Diane, while we're on the topic of oddly specific how-to classes, would you be interested in my course on "How to use grammatically correct sentences in articles describing courses on how to watch American football games"? [editor's note: that sentence might be grammatically incorrect. If so, it's supposed to be ironic or something.]
Welcome to Water Cooler Football - where football and networking meet to have fun!
"To have fun" is a bizarre addendum to that particular sentence, because subjects, objects and verbs are things that matter.
You’re at a party with a football game on, people cheer and you have no idea what happened – do you feel left out?
Here's a free tip from me--if people are cheering, you can do one of two things to fit in. Either just cheer whenever they do, or remain silent and if anyone asks just say you're a Cleveland fan. They'll nod their head in a knowing and sympathetic manner and be none the wiser as to your football ignorance.
At a meeting someone says, “let’s do an end run” – do you feel lost?
Not as lost as mayor Rob Ford of Toronto feels when he tries to actually do an end run!
![]() |
This is a pretty good approximation of how pretty much everything Rob Ford does in public goes. |
That is an extremely odd question. If the answer to the question is yes, the question will make no sense. If the answer is no, it's such a mind-numbingly silly question that it still makes no sense. It's like a zen koan, if the word koan means what I currently believe it means, which I'd say is about a 50/50 proposition.
If you don't know how to watch a football, you maybe left out.
This is pretty much my favorite sentence of ever. Am I doing it right?
![]() |
Fuck! So close. |
Forgetting to watch a football has certainly had a negative impact on Jermichael Finley's career! ZING
You'll also learn some best practices for networking. How to pick your events (aka "whether report")
Frankly, I have no idea what a "whether report" is, so I'm not even sure we're talking about football anymore.
how to get into a conversation, and .... how to get out of one.
That is the most ominous way possible to write that sentence. It suggests that any beginner can get into a conversation about football, but only the experts will be able to extricate themselves later. I can't tell you how many times I've seen a group of football novices start chatting, only to realize that they are stuck in the conversation forever.
Learn how to be a part of the game with tips and from Gene and Diane. (And wait until you hear how they met!)
![]() |
Do I care how they met? No. No, I do not. |
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