meara,
I'm super picky about glasses, so it'd be hard to order frames without trying them on, but...for like, $60 instead of $400, I could be a little less picky.
Not even $60! It's for like $20. I'm willing to try it for $20! Or even $12. Cause the price is frame + lens!
Perkins, did you get a MacBook Air?
No. J. has one though, so I can admire hers.
It's an interesting world. I had a great perspective, too. I was the kid in the corner for a lot of really interesting things: a
big
coup that OMG was just outrageous, the golden days of big investors in on an official movie project, a comm ev (like a court martial), worked for a Scn. law firm that specialized in shell corp/investments, hangin' out back then with people who now are, like, #3 and #4 in the worldwide org... I wish I could write worth sh*t cuz it would be fun to write about some of this stuff. Only I still am under a NDA, I believe, so. Not so much.
FNL: That was just
heartbreaking!
Smash! And Matt! And then
Tami stranding Julie at the DMV
!!!
And next week - for our season finale:
stuntcasting
.
I've got a "kids nowadays" questions. Are twenty somethings a little more reluctant to ask questions that might get taken as challenging than older generations?
Cause I gave a presentation on carbon trading the other day. (Completely unplanned. I was just there to watch the presentation, but the person who supposed to give was delayed by homeland security. So since I was there, and reasonably knowledgeable on the subject there I was with no notes, no preparation, nominated to give the presentation.)
Any at the end of a half hour, I took some questions. And there were good ones, but they all were neutral or supportive of the position the talk took. And since the talk was opposing carbon trading, and that is really a minority position, I knew everybody watching could not agree. And I had seen some skeptical expressions on faces as I was talking.
So I asked outright if anyone had other perspectives they wanted to share, or doubts or rebuttals or refutations. And when I still was getting no responses, I mentioned that I did not believe that civil disagreement with a speaker was in any way impolite, that part of public exchanges of ideas was a willingness to expose mistakes, and question facts or logic that seemed wrong.
And the students kind of glanced at one another, and there were all sorts of challenges. There really were a lot of doubts, but the students seemed to need permission to express them.
I don't know if this is a generational thing, or a regional thing or what. Anyone encountered anything like this recently?
I think it depends a whole lot on the context. Was this like as a guest speaker in a college class, or at a club of some sort, or what? Because I think people are a lot less likely to express dissent in a classroom.
Well we were using a classroom, but it was not a class. It was for a "Focus The Nation" event. But it was mostly a mixture of students and professors who knew each other - maybe a reluctance to express dissent in front of current Professor; their being there combined with it being a classroom might have made it feel like a class.
Today Annabel told us what she wants to be when she grows up--a doctor.
I thought, "That's nice, but conventional."
But she kept going: "And a space monster! And a robot! And...and a pirate!"
Reluctance to express dissent in front of current professor could be a huge part of it -- a combination of not wanting to be the one to say "I disagree" with someone who's determining your grade and a sort of "Well, I don't agree, but the professor seems to, and I'm sure the professor knows more about it than me, so I don't want to be the one asking a stupid question." (Not that I'm claiming to speak for all twenty-somethings, of course. Just myself.)
Still, make sense - not so much a generational thing as a social context thing.