marcel the shell with shoes on
—marcel the shell with shoes on
——How do you cover football, or make football a magazine cover? For this week’s New Yorker, Barry Blitt imagined President Obama’s Super Bowl party: beer, chips, and the leading Republicans tackling each other. But New Yorker football covers date back to the nineteen-twenties. Some touch on issues such as media coverage and gay athletes; others are all about the game. For more New Yorker football covers: http://nyr.kr/yG7cz7
TKoW is going to be all about pretty dresses come spring. I hope you are ready.
(Source: fashion-streetstyle)
Two kinds of schooling
Type 1. You can take a class where you learn technique, facts and procedures.
Type 2. You can take a class where you learn to see, learn to lead and learn to solve interesting problems.
The first type of teaching isn’t particularly difficult to do, and it’s something most of us are trained to absorb. The first type of schooling can even be accomplished with self-discipline and a Dummies book. The first type of class is important but not scarce.
The second kind, on the other hand, is where all real success comes from. It’s really tricky to find and train people to do this sort of teaching, and anytime you can find some of it, you should grab it.
The sad thing is that we often conflate the two. We think we’re hiring someone to do the second type, a once in a lifetime teacher, someone who will change the outlook of stellar students. But then we give them rules and procedures and feedback that turn them into a type 1 teacher.

(Source: heygirlteacher)
Bob Barker: This prize isn’t right
The longtime host of ‘The Price Is Right,’ also a famed animal-rights advocate, is now criticizing the game show for offering rodeo tickets as a prize.
(via zodiacchic)
8 delicious and healthy dips (just in time for the Super Bowl)
Don’t settle for store-bought dips when you can make your own, healthier versions at home. The following recipes make delicious Super Bowl fare as well as a great snack anytime.
Are people tuning in for all the clues (we meet again, yellow umbrella) and drama (there’s been plenty over the past few seasons), or is it simply because it’s a dependable, no-frills sitcom? It wouldn’t be surprising if the answer is both: HIMYM has no doubt grown in popularity thanks to syndication and word-of-mouth, but there’s just as much can’t-miss cliffhanger drama as there is TV equivalent of comfort food in every episode. (The rise in popularity of stars Neil Patrick Harris and Jason Segel throughout the course of the show probably hasn’t hurt much either.)
I think this has something to do with DVD and streaming catch ups, the show is widely available and easily digestible making it easy to catch up and join in. Few people I know have been watching from the very beginning. I myself came to the show on the fifth episode.
(via howimetyourmother)
By far