I was not reminded by the media and hadn't thought of it until you mentioned it.
Natter 55: It's the 55th Natter
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
So who here was reminded by the media that today is Pearl Harbor Day? Who didn't know (and was i not reminded by the media)?
Well, I was just there a couple of weeks ago so I don't think I count. All in all, it was less moving than I thought it would be. If I hadn't gotten a private tour of the USS Missouri the same day, I think I would have been quite disappointed.
I don't recall ever even showing any homework or papers to my parents.
As I had both my parents as teachers in high school I'm pretty sure I didn't do this.
I did remember, but was not reminded (at least not during the part of the news I was awake enough to remember, which is always an issue first thing in the morning when I get most of my news).
It seems to me like Pearl Harbor day is less of a big deal than it used to be.
This is the first time I haven't heard anything at all, but for some time now I've been seeing a shift to more cranky/defensive "you kids today don't appreciate what we did for you!" than straight-up coverage -- which of course may be as much a shift in how the story is framed than any change in the observance of those people who are actually observing. It does seem to be how things progress as the people who were there for an event start to die off: we have a TV Special every fifth (then tenth, then fiftieth) year rather than a shared first-person "where were you when" moment.
Every once in a while, when I was in college, I'd email a paper to my parents and ask for a quick read-through. I think this happened maybe three times in my four years at college. (Usually, my friends and I would proof each others' work, but sometimes, everybody was busy.)
serial (and unrelated)
I don't recall ever even showing any homework or papers to my parents.
Me neither, or at least not routinely -- maybe if I was particularly proud of something, or (at the other extreme) if I was in trouble and had to get something signed. But as a routine matter? No, dad would've been perfectly willing if I'd asked for help, but the norm was that my homework was my job.
lol cats can has science: [link]
My news mentioned it this morning, but I would contend that the anniversary is not that big of a news story anymore. If people don't know what Pearl Harbor is-- maybe that is a story.
My news mentioned it was Pearl Harbor Day this morning. I forget the context. I wasn't really awake.
I know it was mentioned this morning, but I always recall it because my brother's birthday is the next day (we have a habit of remembering significant dates by tying them to disasters if at all possible.)
I remember seeing a (small) article about Pearl Harbor survivors today, FWIW, but nothing else.