Meme-ing our way through

Bring It On.
The movie, I’m not challenging you to a fight. More like a bi platonic movie night.

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The same author also wrote an article on how seltzer hurts his mouth and I don’t think it was satire, but I kept laughing. He claimed that slushees are too carbonated for him. And he even looks like a boat:

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I liked Jezebels take down of his takedown

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Meanwhile I’m over here at a psychedelics conference today like “Why does that name ring a bell? Wasn’t that . . . something about TV?”

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Oh god the ChatGPT one :expressionless: yeah I am, um, not using it yet. Its being widely recommended throughout the design industry, though.

Also EXCUSE ME but I feel very called out by those neurodivergent ones :rofl: related I do my screening tests next month (or this week if I have time, TBD.)

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The sock one is 5000% a personal attack on me. I AM winning at socks tyvm.

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I am trying to figure out if my issues with socks are these issues or just a lack of motivation at getting the right socks

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¿Porque no los dos? :joy:

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When you live in Florida you don’t ever have to wear socks.
#WinningAtSocks

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(a) unless you work in an industry that requires closed toed shoes for safety
(b) also don’t you have crazy AC everywhere and end up with perpetually cold feet? :sob:

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You just reminded me of coworkers who had space heaters under their desks and had blankets on their laps … in summer … in Florida. Then in winter the other parts of the same floor had guys who were sweating because the heat was cranked up. But sure, open floor plans are great.

I always wondered if there could be a heat map of the whole floor and people could reassign their desks by temperature preference instead of by department, what the end result would look like.

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It me. I was the coworker with the heater under my desk. I blame the mens wearing their suits and having more body mass and higher body temperatures. Men’s business attire: long pants, long sleeve shirt, suit jacket. Women’s business attire: knee length skirts and dresses, often sleeveless, thin fabrics.

One of the benefits to WFH is indulging my lizard self with temperatures that make my sluggish cold blood sing.

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Apparently also, men tend to be cool in their core (which is why vests) whereas women tend to be cool in the extremities (fingers and toes) and that’s partly why more women than men have heaters under their desks. I got laughed at when I was wearing skinny gloves at work because my fingers were so cold.

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