Well, Charlize Theron seems to be pulling the Mad Max trigger. That's less hair than T-Hard has...
Right on. Of course, she's had very short hair before and looked awesome so I'm not surprised she's unafraid to go there.
Suzi! I remember finding you at an A's game by spotting your wig from two decks away. That's when you gave Emmett his Bobby Crosby signed ball.
Emmett's added a leg kick to his swing to generate some power and is getting close to jacking some balls on the big fields. In his previous game he pulled a ball foul that went over the two story building along the third base side. Tonight he rocked one to dead center that went about 330 feet before the center fielder made a circus catch to turn it into a long out.
The opposing team had a left-handed hitter who pulled a home run over the sixty foot fence in right.
How scary Kat. I heard about it on NPR on my way home today, didn't know then that it was you.
Looks like Grace Jones is growing more staid and conservative in her later years: [link]
Forbes Most Annoying Business Jargon.
Some of these I've never heard. Most of the rest make me grit my teeth just reading about them.
I adore that Grace Jones is both hula hooping AND singing at the jubilee. She looks, as ever, amazing. Unstoppably so. Tom and Lorenzo have been calling Jada Pinkett Smith Grace-Jones-like, but no way. Pale imitation.
agreed. Grace Jones is fierce.
Some of these I've never heard. Most of the rest make me grit my teeth just reading about them.
OMG, the land of nursing is filled with "Core Competencies".
I also thought Body of Work was not annoying, but then I realized that I work in the arts, where someone actually has a body of work. Using it to refer to a company is weird.
I've come to hate the use of "competency" instead of "competence". But that's me.
In reference to:
Somehow I suspect my Celtic ancestors did not eat these things.
I bet they would have if they could get their hands on them (in reference to oreo-like yummies).
And there was a book by ... Tom Holt? Beowulf and some early warriors awaken from a long sleep and, on being given a ding-dong or some such, one says something like, "classy - gold-plated food" before chowing down.
I don't understand what's wrong with some of those terms. Like "scalable". It has a clear meaning, and that meaning is sometimes important to convey. They don't say whether the word has to go, or the concept.
Among the ones I've never heard: "open the kimono". And I am *so* glad about that, because I would not know where to look or who to glare at first.
And, lord, we use "best practice" all the time. We're tying to clean up a deployment, and one of our key goals it to make sure we're using the vendor's best practices when we implement it. I guess you could say "recommendation" or "standards"--is it because the word "best" is in there that's setting them off?
And then I became bored, because none of those terms are as annoying as a business stretching out an article in order to fit in more advertising. I'm going to call it "pageview whoring" and they're free to object to it as they see fit.
Eh. Some of those are annoying but I'm equally irritated that these types of articles rarely acknowledge that it's actually useful to have a common shorthand for things. Taking something offline - no, it's not literally accurate. But it's easier than "you and I will discuss this later in more detail when we don't have all these other people on the line so as not to waste their time". BFD.