"you shouldn't judge a book by its cover" - what lies beneath could bear an element of surprise
Beauty in the Clouds
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The view was so awesome while we were out walking. Unfortunately neither one of us had camera or phone. Here is what I was able to capture after returning home
I remember watching a documentary with my mom in 1991. It was called Age 7 in America. At least I think that’s what it was called. I don’t know who’s responsible for making it. It looks like it may have been created by Christopher Quinn patterned after an idea done in Britain? I don’t even recall which network sponsored the program. Quinn (who also narrated the film) told us that the plan was to follow a number of children from different backgrounds and upbringings and interview them every seven years. I remember looking for “Age 14 in America” but not finding it. I don’t know what prompted me to look it up on YouTube this year – but I did find it. Age 7, age 14 and age 21 (thank you Orletta Crichlow) and watched Up 21and was really quite impressed. Years ago, when my mom and I had been watching, there were three girls wearing school uniforms. As they were being interviewed, the one in the middle...
I don’t much care for reality shows. As a whole, I think so many started out as bogus – though there are some really good ones now. I don’t watch the Biggest Loser, but that is at least believable as being real. So many of the first reality shows introduced were “staged”. Over five years ago TBS advertised one called “He’s a Lady”. I would roll my eyes every time I saw the commercial. And yet, I must have been intrigued. Must have had some sense of morbid curiosity. Why would a guy subject himself to follow in a woman’s footsteps for 6 weeks or two months or whatever it was. How about a quarter of a million prize money? Or the “false” advertisement which drew them to enter in the first place? There were at least eleven candidates who had applied for “The All American Man” contest – prove to the nation just who w...
Jenna and I have played “Crazy Countries” a game much like Crazy 8 Of course the Africa continent deck has a lot more cards than say Oceania or South America deck and so we of course don’t play with all of the cards. We’re not learning countries so much as continents – for I have told Jenna that whenever we use a wild card to change suit, we have to say by continent rather than color. I took Spanish in 9 th and 10 th grade. In my first year, part of our lessons included studying the countries in South America . We were also assigned pen pals to correspond with in hopes that it would help us learn our Spanish and assist our pen pal with his or her English. The map of South America looks the same way I remember it looking in 1975. It looks the same way today. And I am impressed by the stableness of the boundaries. It makes geography so much easier to learn (and share). After playing “Crazy Countri...
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