Shared posts

31 Oct 15:12

Texas judge gave instructions to prosecuting attorneys to help them convict defendants

by Minnesotastan
Paulahmartin

This is pretty awful.

As reported at Boing Boing:
Third generation Texas judge Elizabeth E. Coker has resigned just ahead of being investigated for misconduct; she admits that she texted instructions to prosecutors in order to help them convict the defendants whose cases she heard. She also is accused of other indiscretions, including meeting with jurors and attempting to influence them to convict defendants. The State Commission on Judicial Conduct suggests that she lied to them as well, perjuring herself. She's out of a job, but apparently will face no criminal or civil sanctions for her crimes; nor will the victims whose trials she perverted be freed. 
Also no mention of indictments or penalties for the prosecuting attorneys who received her texts and failed to report the activity.  Perhaps some reader here can clarify - is this not a criminal act?  Or just not a crime in Texas?  Is it merely a moral/ethical lapse appropriately treated by reprimand and job loss?

More details at the Boing Boing link and at the Montgomery County Police Reporter.
30 Oct 21:16

How Planned Obsolescence Encourages You to Buy New Things

by Mike Dang
by Mike Dang


At first, I thought it was my imagination. Around the time the iPhone 5S and 5C were released, in September, I noticed that my sad old iPhone 4 was becoming a lot more sluggish. The battery was starting to run down much faster, too. But the same thing seemed to be happening to a lot of people who, like me, swear by their Apple products. When I called tech analysts, they said that the new operating system (iOS 7) being pushed out to existing users was making older models unbearably slow. Apple phone batteries, which have a finite number of charges in them to begin with, were drained by the new software. So I could pay Apple $79 to replace the battery, or perhaps spend 20 bucks more for an iPhone 5C. It seemed like Apple was sending me a not-so-subtle message to upgrade.

In this weekend’s NYT Magazine’s economics column, Catherine Rampell examines “planned obsolescence,” which essentially means giving products a limited life span so that consumers will be encouraged to spend money to replace them, or to upgrade when new lines of products come out. Rampell uses her iPhone 4 as an example, which she says suspiciously wore down just as Apple released their latest lines of iPhones.

I went from a flip phone to an iPhone 4S a few years ago, and I’m not planning on replacing my phone until it’s damaged or ceases to work. With planned obsolescence, maybe my phone will start degrading the next time a new line of phones come out.

Photo: Tony Eccles

13 Comments
30 Oct 20:31

Mechanical Donkey Kong

by Lord Libidan

30 Oct 17:18

Creepiest Halloween costume ever.

by Lydia Marks
Someone should use this to make a horror movie.
Via
25 Oct 20:08

Benjaman Kyle

by Greg Ross
Paulahmartin

I just think this is a very interesting tale. I've read more about his life and it's pretty wild to not know who you are (if that is indeed what's going on here)

On Aug. 31, 2004, this man was discovered, naked and unconscious, behind a Burger King restaurant in Richmond Hill, Ga. When he regained consciousness in the local hospital, he was unable to remember who he was or how he’d came there.

That was nine years ago, and he still can’t remember. Benjaman Kyle — a name he adopted simply because it shares initials with Burger King — has been diagnosed with dissociative amnesia. He believes his birthday is Aug. 29, 1948, and he has some fragmentary memories of Denver and Indianapolis. But beyond that his life is largely a blank. He has been the subject of numerous newspaper stories and has appeared on national television, but no one has recognized him. He is the only American citizen whose whereabouts are known and yet is officially listed as missing.

The lack of a name or a Social Security number makes the search uniquely difficult. Benjaman has snapshots of memory: buying a grilled cheese sandwich at the Indiana state fair in the 1950s, and public debates over mass transit in Denver in the 1980s. But these lead nowhere. The Indiana Bureau of Motor Vehicles tried and failed to match his face with anyone in its records, and the FBI has been unable to match his DNA or fingerprints.

In 2010 he told told the Guardian that he often refrains from telling his story to new acquaintances because “you get two reactions. They want to tell you their theories or they think you’re mad. Neither is much fun for me.”

He acknowledges that many stories such as his turn out to be hoaxes. “It sounds crazy, I know that,” he says. “All I can say is I’m telling the truth.”

25 Oct 14:57

Former pitcher John Smoltz rumored in lead for top Fox Sports broadcast spot

Paulahmartin

Wouldn't anyone be better?

Fox Sports looks to replace McCarver as main color announcer
24 Oct 23:44

WiBuy Local?

by Kerry

“Foster’s Market in Chapel Hill, North Carolina is a pretty popular place right off a college campus,” says our submitter, Hope. “Lots of students come in, maybe get a coffee and sit for hours using the free wireless without buying anything else.” In response, the owners recently changed the name of the WiFi network. Gets the point across, no?

Our wireless network is called 'BUY A SANDWICH' and does not require a password

related: Passive-Aggressive WiFi

24 Oct 22:27

Hi, I’m Rob The Palm Sqwerl

by Brinke
Paulahmartin

please please please please

[Hi, I'm Rob. A movie guy filming in Sri Lanka this summer rescued me!]

10319358524_d2163a04a2_z
[Got my own FB, natch.]

10319378865_45b071065c_z
[More deets here- I think his name is Paul. I don't know for sure tho, since I can't read.]

10319399106_d4294707cc_z
[Dude couldn't take me back to the UK so he set me up in a hotel.]

10319400706_87860706e5_z
[Pretty sweet deal, right?]

10319401006_9a5d95c90d_z
[I've had to turn down a lot of media requests. But not Christiane Amanpour. I like her.]

10319401776_46e4f2ff8a_z
[I think I need an agent.]

10319402446_5320692bc1_z
[But then I gotta pay like 20%, so maybe not.]

10319544293_c363339b97_z
Nite Nite!

9787984312_2e2b366276_c
All photos from the Paul Williams site except the last one, which was spotted at Mail Online.


Filed under: Uncategorized Tagged: ResQte, Squirrels
23 Oct 21:23

Nuns with deep St. Louis roots place wagers on World Series

Paulahmartin

The one of the left knows a bunch of programming languages, she taught all the programming classes at my high school and the physics classes and I think upper level math. The one on the right is an absolute genius...could teach any math class. I think for Halloween they used to dress up as a clothesline since they couldn't really change to a different outfit.

The bet: frozen custard if the Cardinals lose; New England-style pizza if the Red Sox lose.
23 Oct 21:05

Obama Hands

23 Oct 16:49

Our Nuggets Under the Microscope

by Mike Dang
Paulahmartin

As soon as I hear "blood vessels and nerve" as a large component of nuggets, it make me want to...not really eat them. Except for those really good chick fil a ones, which are actually chicken.

by Mike Dang


The nugget from the first restaurant (breading not included) was approximately 50 percent muscle. The other half was primarily fat, with some blood vessels and nerve, as well as “generous quantities of epithelium [from skin of visceral organs] and associated supportive tissue.” That broke down overall to 56 percent fat, 25 percent carbohydrates, and 19 percent protein.

The nugget from the second restaurant was 40 percent skeletal muscle, as well as “generous quantities of fat and other tissue, including connective tissue and bone.” That was 58 percent fat, 24 percent carbs, and 18 percent protein.

“We’ve taken a very healthy product—lean, white meat—and processed it, goo-ed it up with fat, sugar, and salt [in the breading],” he said. “Kids love that combination.” So do non-kids.

A professor of medicine and pediatrics at the University of Mississippi Medical Center examined random chicken nuggets from two unnamed restaurants and discovered that chicken nuggets actually don’t have very much lean, white meat. Aren’t chicken nuggets on the level of hot dogs by now? Hot dogs are also often a mish-mash of different parts, but they’re popular among kids as well. And they’re popular among kids, as we learned from Jamie Oliver, even when kids know what the nuggets are made of. The National Chicken Council still maintains that chicken nuggets are a good source or protein and that consumers can just look at websites and pamphlets for nutritional information. Also chains like KFC know that people can be turned off by this mish-mash so they are quick to advertise that their nuggets are entirely made of breast meat. And they’re delicious.

Photo: Fox Wu

9 Comments
22 Oct 21:30

Amazon Quietly Ups The Free Shipping Minimum Purchase To $35

by Mary Beth Quirk

For as long as we can remember, Amazon.com’s minimum purchase requirement to qualify for its free super saver shipping was $25, a pretty easy threshhold for many shoppers to reach with perhaps a couple of books or a really nice salad spinner. It’ll be a bit tougher now, however, as Amazon has quietly increased the free shipping amount to $35.

Consumerist reader Whitney writes that she only noticed the change when she tried to buy something, and it appears that customers haven’t received the news straight from the horse’s mouth.

“Amazon did not make any kind of direct announcement, just this little quiet piece found in a corner of their website, and people finding out when they tried to purchase things yesterday/today,” she writes. “I’m glad I have Prime, but a lot of folks don’t.”

There’s only this note, tucked away in a spot on the site that’s not easy to find unless you click around a bit and know exactly what you’re looking for:

Changes to Amazon Free Shipping
These changes relate specifically to FREE Super Saver Shipping. All other services remain unchanged.

Amazon’s minimum order size for free shipping has changed to $35. This is the first time in more than a decade that Amazon has altered the minimum order for free shipping in the US. During that time, we have expanded free shipping selection by millions of items across all 40 product categories. Look for “FREE Shipping” on product pages to discover eligible items.

It’s not so much the shipping requirement that sticks in the craw, but the way Amazon non-announced it. Customers appreciate being filled in on changes before they happen, instead of finding out belatedly when their items are already in the digital basket.


22 Oct 19:25

Round and Round

by Greg Ross
Paulahmartin

There is an STLtoday commenter who tries to bring up, in so many unrelated articles, how stupid roundabouts are and how unsafe they are and how they waste fuel and only exist to make money for a favored contractor. It's just so funny...he's really upset about it. Anyway the one by my work made everything a million times better, now traffic doesn't back up into the highway.

Since demolishing 78 traffic signals and installing 80 roundabouts, the northern Indiana city of Carmel has reduced the number of accidents by 40 percent and the number of accidents with injuries by 78 percent.

“It’s nearly impossible to have a head-on or T-bone collision when using the roadways, and collisions that do happen tend to occur at much lower speeds,” noted Governing magazine. “Other benefits of roundabouts include reduced fuel consumption, due to a lack of idling, and a construction cost that is at least $150,000 less than installing traffic lights.”

“We have more than any other city in the U.S.,” says mayor James Brainard. “It’s a trend now in the United States. There are more and more roundabouts being built every day because of the expense saved and, more importantly, the safety.”

22 Oct 18:53

DOG ON IT

by Jen

Kari K. ordered a birthday cake with a picture of several puppies on it, and then - just to make it extra festive - asked the baker to pipe party hats and glasses on the dogs.

 

 

GUESS WHAT HAPPENED.

 

 

 

Doggone it.

 

22 Oct 15:28

Fox News on the Affordable Care Act, Two Ways

by Mike Dang
Paulahmartin

The source article is good too. It's a little angering, but good.

by Mike Dang

On Friday, Salon’s Eric Stern fact-checked a segment on Fox News where Sean Hannity announced, “Average Americans are feeling the pain of Obamacare and the healthcare overhaul train wreck.” One example: A couple lamented to Hannity that because of the Affordable Care Act, they could not grow their construction business and had to limit the hours of their workers. When Stern called the couple up, he learned that the construction business in question has only four employees (the ACA has no effect on businesses with 49 employees or less). Stern asked him why he cut back his operation:

“Well,” he said, “I haven’t been forced to do so, it’s just that I’ve chosen to do so. I have to deal with increased costs.” What costs? And how, I asked him, is any of it due to Obamacare? There was a long pause, after which he said he’d call me back. He never did.

It’s pretty clear that Fox News isn’t embracing the Affordable Care Act, and the segment itself is not so surprising. What is surprising is Fox News contributor Sally Kohn’s piece on her attempts to access her state’s health insurance exchange website, which she wasn’t able to do for a few days, and what she found when she was finally able to get on. Kohn writes:

There were literally 50 plans that were better than my current insurance — both with lower premiums, lower out-of-pocket costs and better coverage. And there were ten plans with a higher premium than my current insurance, but with lower deductibles.

So — and here’s an important point — the reason that more people haven’t signed up for coverage yet is probably that, just like me, they needed to take some time (and first, find some time!) to weigh all the options.

Kohn was able to find a better and cheaper plan on the health insurance exchange sites. Kohn’s lesson: Try the exchange, and look at the options that are available to you—it might surprise you.

3 Comments
21 Oct 20:06

This is me in the morning...

by Lydia Marks
Every morning.
Via
18 Oct 21:15

Missouri lawmaker upset by gay-supportive T-shirt at book fair

Paulahmartin

What a jackass. He says it's not about the gay thing, it's that kids shouldn't be exposed to sex in elementary school. Since no one was fucking on the shirts, I think we're ok.

Rep. Kevin Elmer said two high school students wore shirts for the Nixa High School Gay-Straight Alliance at an elementary school book fair. 
18 Oct 13:44

Happy Landings

by Greg Ross

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matekane_Air_Strip

Travel + Leisure named Lesotho’s Matekane Air Strip one of the world’s scariest runways. The tarmac is only 1,312 feet long, and it ends abruptly at the edge of a couloir at 7,550 feet.

If you run out of runway before getting airborne, explained bush pilot Tom Claytor, “you shoot off the end of the airstrip, then drop down the 2,000-foot cliff face until you start flying. … It’s a little bit hard to do the first time.”

17 Oct 15:04

Stenographer Dragged Off House Floor After Open-Mic Rant

by Brian Feldman
Paulahmartin

This is bizarre.

House of Representatives stenographer Dianne Reidy was rushed off the floor tonight while addressing the chamber during the vote to reopen the federal government. Public Radio International correspondent Todd Zwillich managed to get a recording of Reidy's impromptu remarks:

She spoke for almost a minute, saying:

He will not be mocked. He will not be mocked. [to someone next to her] Don't touch me. [to the chamber] He will not be mocked. The greatest deception here is this is not one nation under God. It never was. Had it been, it would not have been— no. It would not have been— constitution would not have been written by Freemasons. They go against God. You cannot serve two masters. You cannot serve two masters. Praise be to God, Lord Jesus Christ.

Reidy can be seen being escorted from the podium in this audio-less clip from C-SPAN.

According to Fox congressional reporter Chad Pergram, Reidy was then interviewed by capitol police.

House stenographer Dianne Reidy now being interviewed by USCP.

— Chad Pergram (@ChadPergram) October 17, 2013

    






16 Oct 16:26

Cadbury Job Applicant

by noreply@blogger.com (Joanne Casey)
16 Oct 16:25

It's Free

by noreply@blogger.com (Joanne Casey)
Paulahmartin

I love google predictive search

15 Oct 20:36

Pujols' attorney fires back at polygraph offer in steroid defamation suit

Paulahmartin

This whole thing is so stupid.

Pujols will answer questions in court, not hooked to machine, lawyer says.
15 Oct 19:39

Menards should use union, local workers for Richmond Heights store, union says

Paulahmartin

I guess I'm not sure what public money has to do with it...maybe i missed that part.

RICHMOND HEIGHTS  •  Union representatives are asking the Richmond Heights City Council to consider requiring Menards to use union and local workers to construct a Menards store in the old Had…
15 Oct 16:12

Man's partially eaten body found in Detroit home

Paulahmartin

If we just saw the headline without the location we could start playing "Detroit or Florida?"

DETROIT  •  An autopsy is expected on the remains of a Detroit man who police say was partly devoured by an animal in his home.
14 Oct 21:58

She Doesn't Do Missions, It's Fine!

She Doesn't Do Missions, It's Fine!

Submitted by: felbladex

Tagged: xbox live , GTA V
14 Oct 19:11

The Confederate Flag Won't Help Conservatives Win the Shutdown

by Connor Simpson
Paulahmartin

In many parts of America, waving a Confederate flag outside the home of a black family would be considered a very hostile act.
— Jeffrey Goldberg (@JeffreyGoldberg) October 13, 2013

Someone actually thought it was a good idea to bring a Confederate flag to protests at the White House, ones attended by Sarah Palin and Ted Cruz. Shockingly the flag's presence is backfiring for Conservatives who hoped today's protests would be the big momentum turn in their favor. 

Sen. Ted Cruz and Sen. Mike Lee, flanked by former Alaskan governor Sarah Palin, headlined protests at the World War II Memorial on the National Mall Sunday morning, as they helped push through barriers and lead a contingent of veterans into the government site closed due to the shutdown. The goal was simple: use this stand to blame Obama for shutdown and, while side-by-side with a crew of veterans, accuse the President of using veterans as a pawn in the shutdown game. For a while the effort seemed to be working, at least on the right. The National Review's Robert Costa explained on Twitter: 

This is a big story; House conservatives tell me it's a "game-changer," gives Right new momentum ahead of this week http://t.co/QRzlHrjOcf

— Robert Costa (@robertcostaNRO) October 13, 2013

If you can't fathom my report about Right enthusiasm/#war mentality following memorial protests, go ask a righty lawmaker, or check out...

— Robert Costa (@robertcostaNRO) October 13, 2013

... front pages of Breitbart, Twitchy, Drudge, Blaze, Townhall, Daily Caller, etc

— Robert Costa (@robertcostaNRO) October 13, 2013

When I say "big story," I mean big story to those on Right on Hill who have some sway/decisions to make in the coming days

— Robert Costa (@robertcostaNRO) October 13, 2013

That's what I'm reporting: this vet/Palin/Cruz memorial protest story is going viral quickly on right, will shape House GOP scene on M & T

— Robert Costa (@robertcostaNRO) October 13, 2013

As groups of truckers converged on the protest with the veterans, the unrest in Washington only grew. Everything was looking up for the right. The base was taking a stand and literally tearing down barriers put up by the government. But then all the momentum the Right had seemingly gained went straight down the toilet: 

Shocked, SHOCKED I tell you, to see a Confederate flag in this picture. pic.twitter.com/9xOuD8ed1R

— Jesse Berney (@jesseberney) October 13, 2013

Pro tip: If you want to express your love of US Army & its monuments … leave the Confederate flag at home. pic.twitter.com/dyByu9av51

— davidfrum (@davidfrum) October 13, 2013

Never mind the horrible polling numbers that show Republicans taking a huge hit for the shutdown. At their big turnaround effort to win public opinion, the Confederate flag reared its ugly head and undid any progress or good will they hoped to earn on Sunday. Many were quick to explain just how terribly, impossibly bad this looks for Republicans: 

In many parts of America, waving a Confederate flag outside the home of a black family would be considered a very hostile act.

— Jeffrey Goldberg (@JeffreyGoldberg) October 13, 2013

sen cruz, palin gather angry mob to damage property, wave confederate flag outside black family's home #tcot

— Liam Liwanag Burke (@liamlburke) October 13, 2013

Waving a Confederate flag at the home of a black family isn't okay anywhere. It's a threat of violence.

— Lee Fang (@lhfang) October 13, 2013

In fairness, tea party bringing confederate flags to rally reminds us that first shutdown in 1860s was considerably worse than this one.

— Josh Marshall (@joshtpm) October 13, 2013

Some members of the conservative media tried to defend the guy carrying the Confederate flag: 

Good for the media. They've finally found the grand mastermind of all conservative politics: some random jackass with a Confederate flag.

— Ben Shapiro (@benshapiro) October 13, 2013

Give liberals this: They figured out that the one clown with a Confederate flag on Pa. Ave. is the true leader of American conservatism.

— Timothy P Carney (@TPCarney) October 13, 2013

But others disputed that weak defense, because the Confederate flag pops up in conservative controversies every few months. Saying that one guy is an outlier doesn't work, the argument goes, because that one guy is popping up too often: 

If thousands of conservatives didn't display, defend, and clearly enjoy the hell out the confederate flag maybe we could talk outliers.

— jess mcintosh (@jess_mc) October 13, 2013

Meanwhile, negotiations are still stalled in the Senate with no signs of a breakthrough coming. 


    






14 Oct 18:56

Ayn Random

In a cavern deep below the Earth, Ayn Rand, Paul Ryan, Rand Paul, Ann Druyan, Paul Rudd, Alan Alda, and Duran Duran meet together in the Secret Council of /(b[plurandy]+b ?){2}/i.
11 Oct 18:45

One Possible Future for Movies: Projecting Them in 270 Degrees

by Leslie Finlay
CGV

The story was nothing special: dapper secret agents, ribbed metal briefcases carrying confidential contents, double-crossing lovers with a penchant for the extravagant, motorcycle chases that defy physics. It could have been an episode out of any old spy series.

But the audience was gripped.

South Korean director Kim Jee-woon's latest work features all of the usual staples fit for an action-adventure film, but it captivates its audience so thoroughly by other means. Kim, who recently directed The Last Stand starring Arnold Schwarzenegger, on Friday premiered his short feature The X using his country’s new multi-projection technology, ScreenX.

ScreenX extends the movie onto the sidewalls of the theater, effectively wrapping certain scenes around the audience by filming in 270 degrees. SoundX was also developed to complement the visual technology and convey a richer sense of space and distance. These inventions provide a way to surround viewers more fully, but more enticingly, they also may offer new narrative possibilities for filmmakers.

“We want it to be overwhelming at first,” Kim said. “But then you begin to see how other things are represented [in ScreenX], and how other parts of the story are revealed, other information is added.”

Shooting the movie “was like hell and nightmare,” according to the director, who had to make adjustments throughout the entire filming and editing process, and whose crew was constantly running around trying to stay out of the way of the special camera rig equipped to capture 270 degrees of action. Lighting and set design had to be completely reworked to cooperate with the gear, but the production process was challenging as well.

“When I first made the movie, it was spectacular seeing from the right and the left side, but we had to make very detailed calculations during production so that [the viewer] is not very distracted, but knows where to look,” Kim said, adding that to an extent, the viewer controls the movie in his or her own head based on where they look and what they see.

Starring Gang Dong-won and Sin Min-a, The X premiered at the 2013 Busan International Film Festival as the first film to ever be shown to an audience in ScreenX (a handful of Korean movie trailers and commercials have inaugurated the technology.) It is about a secret agent called X whose girlfriend betrays him during a mission to deliver a secret briefcase. The project was commissioned by CGV, Korea’s largest multiplex cinema chain.

An Goo-choul, the chief strategy officer at CGV said the technology was developed to “give more freedom to directors,” and that the company, which has applied for patents in Korea for the technology, is already exploring partnership possibilities with production companies in Hollywood, encountering positive response so far.

A scene from The X. (CGV)

The X certainly takes advantage of the technology’s aptitude for enhancing action/adventure sequences. As the characters dive into a high-speed chase, motorcycles subtly creep along either side of the theater when, suddenly, explosions turn the audience’s focus to the right as the action continues up front, sound thrown around the theater to coordinate with the chaos of the pursuit. But the breadth of ScreenX’s capabilities is demonstrated through some of the film’s quieter, more delicate scenes—splashing detail, sound and characters across all three screens, using off-screen space to enhance audience immersion. Early in the film, a disco ball hovers over the injured X, and as he struggles up front the glitter from the ball showers across the left and right walls of the theater, opening up parts of the set typically out of view. Later, as X clambers in the dark, the beam from his flashlight is thrown across each screen, illuminating all corners of the 270 degrees, scattering the audience’s attention throughout the theater.

“I initially thought ScreenX would be more effective for spectacular scenes but came to realize that it is unexpectedly effective for lyrical or creepy scenes, too,” Kim said.

The X opens as a movie-goer would expect, with all of the action right up on the single, traditional screen. When ScreenX is activated it is sudden and fully captivating, heightening the senses—but almost exhaustingly so. Response at the premiere was positive, but this experimental film is only 30 minutes in length. The development team says they’re hopeful, however, that the technology will translate well to feature-length films, especially considering the massive popularity of movies shot for IMAX.

“I think ScreenX will offer a stronger cinematic experience to audiences than IMAX by making them feel the images are filling the space fully,” Kim said. 

Noh Junyoung, the R&D technical supervisor on the project and associate professor at KAIST, a science and technology university in Korea, said the team tried to find ways to keep the original structure of the theater space as much as possible to prevent a major cost increase and maintain a familiar environment for viewers.

According to Noh, unlike IMAX, which calls for a specially equipped theater, installing a ScreenX system to an ordinary movie theater is inexpensive. But he said that they faced certain constraints when planning to retrofit theaters to support ScreenX: Installation of white screens on the sidewalls was not allowed, and existing speakers or exit doors could not be removed. In addition, the costly, main-screen projector must be left untouched. So they used "additional, cheap projectors to cover side walls while maintaining the quality of the projected images consistent across the walls,” Noh said.

CGV currently has 40 screens designed to show ScreenX films at 22 theaters throughout South Korea, and Noh said he expects many more will be ScreenX-ready soon.

“[The X] is a starting point,” Kim said. “A feature film could leverage the technology, show the full capabilities of what ScreenX could do, how it could be more sophisticated.”


    






11 Oct 15:05

Super Mario playing cards

by biotv

Super Mario Bros Trump Limited Edition Playing Cards - Retro 8-Bit Dot Version, from Nintendo
The Super Mario Playing Cards are the perfect collectible item for Super Mario fans, arguably Nintendo's greatest game. There are THREE great versions of the sets to choose from: the standard set is a classic cartoon style, while the enhanced 3D neon version will suit design fans. Finally, the 8-bit set (above) is for the ultimate lover of retro.
via

Also: The Legend of Zelda playing cards
11 Oct 14:56

Putting granddaughter in car trunk costs Missouri couple $50

Paulahmartin

I totally thought this would be JeffCo but it's not.

The couple said they had bought some tables that didn't fit in the trunk, so they put the girl there so they could move the tables.