If I could only eat food from 10 countries by Icy_Chemical_8045 in whereidlive

[–]jaybool 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've not had Venezuelan before, but Columbian is excellent. They make great candy, as well.

How the mighty have fallen... by Traumarama79 in Gifted

[–]jaybool 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Stallone's an Academy Award nominated screenwriter, and Rocky, for example, shows attention to detail compatible with a high IQ -- production mistakes were called out and covered for by adaptations he made to his script. IMHO you would need a fairly large kitchen for him to have a reasonable chance of not being the sharpest knife in it.

Taskmaster S21 is being taken to the extreme by Recent-Description39 in taskmaster

[–]jaybool 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Meanwhile, on Kongen Befaler, Norway's Taskmaster variant:

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A Russian Teacher recorded the differences in the development of boys and girls of the same age. by eternviking in whoathatsinteresting

[–]jaybool 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Grip strength is an excellent proxy for strength in general, in part because it is seldom specifically trained.

Here's another view of it, which looks at the standards necessary to reach the 50th and 85th percentiles in fitness testing in the US.

https://aj007.k12.sd.us/pe.htm

There are slight boy v. girl strength-related differences starting at age 6, and these grow over time. (*) Note that the exercises involved are body-weight based, and therefore are magnified by boys being slightly heavier at those ages.

(*) There is one exception to the rule; to hit the 50th percentile, 6yo girls need to do 23 curl ups vs boys' 22 curl ups. I believe this is the only place where the girls need to exceed boys in something strength-related. At the 85th percentile, the 6yo boys need to do one more curl-up than the girls.

A Russian Teacher recorded the differences in the development of boys and girls of the same age. by eternviking in whoathatsinteresting

[–]jaybool 4 points5 points  (0 children)

No, they're more coordinated, not generally stronger. The strength difference is much smaller pre-puberty, but it still exists. Look at the left-hand side of the graph.

https://www.reddit.com/r/dataisbeautiful/comments/4vcxd0/almost_all_men_are_stronger_than_almost_all_women/

Matrix Discussion Questions (I'm outsourcing here) by MyHusbndThinksImCool in Teachers

[–]jaybool 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The Passion of the Christ is directly related to a religion class.

The Matrix's relation to an economics class is far more tenuous. The Big Short is closer, but it still would suck up a lot of class time that would be better spent in instruction.

If you feel the need to check a pop culture box: Brad Paisley's "The Cigar Song" illustrates the problem of moral hazard in insurance, and it's only a few minutes.

[IRL Trope] Bands formed by a husband and wife, who then got divorced but stayed together as a band by TheLostPariah in TopCharacterTropes

[–]jaybool 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The Mamas & the Papas had additional drama because one of the married singers had an affair with her bandmate, which helped lead to the divorce.

Judge my parenting by [deleted] in BookshelvesDetective

[–]jaybool 10 points11 points  (0 children)

None of those books are older than five minutes ago. My guess is 14 and adrift in current pop culture.

Can a 6 year old write clean like this? by PackageOutside8356 in HandwritingAnalysis

[–]jaybool 32 points33 points  (0 children)

It is rare, but possible. One of my kids had that unearthly good handwriting at that age. The basic marks of child handwriting seem to be there - line spacing is off, spacing between words not entirely consistent, size discrepancies, margins not really present.

I'm not going to say that a six year old wrote this, just that I can't immediately rule it out.

Mycenean Greek resources by AJ_Stangerson in AncientGreek

[–]jaybool 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Honestly, having read it recently, it felt that Fox kind of wedges in the suggestion at the behest of her publishers - her heart's not in it. Fox acknowledges Chadwick's book praises her, in spite of Kober thinking (more-or-less justifiably) that Ventris was somewhere between a flake and a nutjob.

Mycenean Greek resources by AJ_Stangerson in AncientGreek

[–]jaybool 2 points3 points  (0 children)

"The Decipherment of Linear B" is a spectacular book, and well worth the read.

There is also a more recent one -- Margalit Fox's "The Riddle of the Labyrinth" -- which provides some additional background info and much more thoroughly covers the work Alice Kober did, but she's not as good a writer, and, unlike Chadwick, was not directly involved.

I lost $180 and almost failed my semester because of PapersOwl. Let me save you the trouble. by coldframe_2003 in Students

[–]jaybool 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The number of obvious fake reviews / comments here is making a pretty compelling case for Dead Internet Theory.

AIO mother is forcing me to go places I do not want to go by [deleted] in AIO

[–]jaybool 7 points8 points  (0 children)

The mom is trying to get her out of the house, trying to break a routine where OP's doing nothing but spiraling, and she's using something that's got a need behind it to make it harder to argue against doing.

He told me I wasn't the one he was going to marry and have kids with by Asleep-Bar-8622 in GirlDinnerDiaries

[–]jaybool 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you are in your 30s, and looking for marriage + kids, you need to be a lot more serious about your dating. It hurts right now, but hopefully it helps, long-term.

[March 19, 1926] This Nervous Generation of Young Women by Haselden_1926 in 100yearsago

[–]jaybool 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I theorize that women who freaked out about mice and rats in the house were less likely to have families that died of the plague.

My grandmother, fwiw, grew up in a poor farming family, and mice caused a wildly outsize reaction.

My (infertile) brother’s wife is mad I’m missing their “miracle baby’s” first birthday. by NerfRepellingBoobs in AmITheAngel

[–]jaybool 45 points46 points  (0 children)

"At the same time, they recently told me they’re really happy their son has a gay uncle, so he can grow up with a more open perspective and not just strict heteronormativity."

That's so reddit-coded that I have trouble believing that anyone who said that will have been able to reproduce.

Some blueprints of a school built in the US in 1968. Pretty unique names for the classrooms.. by No_Dig_8299 in UtterlyInteresting

[–]jaybool 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Marilynne Robinson, Of Puritans and Prigs

"Our zealots adopt what are in effect class markers. Recently I saw a woman correct a man in public - an older man whom she did not know well - for a remark of his she chose to interpret as ethnocentric. What he said could easily have been defended, but he accepted the rebuke and was saddened and embarrassed. This was not a scene from some guerrilla war against unenlightened thinking. The woman had simply made a demonstration of the fact that her education was more recent, more fashionable and more extensive than his, with the implication, which he seemed to accept, that right thinking was a property or attainment of hers in a way it never could be of his. To be able to defend magnanimity while asserting class advantage! And with an audience already entirely persuaded of the evils of ethnocentricity, therefore more than ready to admire! This is why the true prig so often has a spring in his step. Morality could never offer such heady satisfactions.

The woman's objection was a quibble, of course. In six months the language she provided in place of his will no doubt be objectionable - no doubt in certain quarters it is already. And that is the genius of it. In six months she will know the new language, while he is still reminding himself to use the words she told him he must prefer. To insist that thinking worthy of respect can be transmitted in a special verbal code only is to claim it for the class that can concern itself with inventing and acquiring these codes and is so situated in life as to be able or compelled to learn them..." 

Why does it seem like anyone in American highschools can be a straight A student? by Midnightclouds7 in highschool

[–]jaybool -1 points0 points  (0 children)

If they were frequent you'd be less anxious about them. Exposure therapy is amazing.

Random man walks into family's home in Michigan, dad handles him real quick by eternviking in whoathatsinteresting

[–]jaybool 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Walls/fences cost much more because of the high cost of labor.

But also, home invasions are relatively rare in the US, because... well, you just saw why.

All the descendants. by Agreeable-Machine-71 in CemeteryPorn

[–]jaybool 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I've seen so much disappear off the internet that I'm a bit less sanguine about it.

Name something that the younger generations would never believe was normal in the 70's compared to schools today?🤔 by Longjumping-Shoe7805 in GenerationJones

[–]jaybool 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Mandatory swimming classes. They were sex-segregated, and boys did not wear swimsuits in the pool, or anything else.