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Doohickie

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Everything posted by Doohickie

  1. I'm watching Detroit coverage. Lurv me some Mickey Redmond.
  2. Well I guess the Sabres won that trade...
  3. Really? Rebound point blank? You're not gonna like the next 30 seconds.
  4. How 'bout some more lethal Sabres power play?
  5. Yes I was vaguely wondering the same way. Thanks for organizing my thoughts 😉
  6. In terms of the song itself, Brian Wilson said when he was a boy his mother used to talk about the vibrations people gave off. The concept stuck with him and he decided to compose a song around the concept. I also found this (I put the quote below in italics because the quote feature truncates quote display). It sounds like the idea of "vibes" or "vibrations" meaning kind of an ephemeral energy a person gives off (good or bad) was a thing prior to the song, but the song clearly injected the concept into pop culture. Q: Hi... can we talk about vibes? A: Good ones? Q: Good, bad, whatever. I just hear lots of young people these days describing something using “it’s a vibe”. A: Ah yes, the youth of today – a constant delight. Q: I know right? A: So yeah, the phrase “it’s a vibe” (also a 2017 rap song by 2 Chainz and his buddies Ty Dolla Sign, Trey Songz and Jhené Aiko) is typically used to describe something or someplace positive. Of course, the noun “vibe” is not a new thing. Macquarie Dictionary defines it as colloquial, “a dominant quality, mood, or atmosphere”. Q: So it obviously came from “vibration”, right? A: Well, sort of. Long before batteries were invented, the word “vibration” turned up in English – around the 1650s – from Latin “vibratio” or “vibrare” meaning “to shake, brandish or set in tremulous motion”. Q: That’s a rather shaky origin story. A: Hahaha. Nice. Then, the Italian word “vibrato” was introduced in the 1860s to describe a tone that oscillates slightly in pitch, famously used by opera singers while holding a note. Q: Wait, are we finished already? A: Um no. Why? Q: Oh sorry, it’s just that the fat lady was singing and I assumed… A: Uh huh. Anyway, well into the 20th century, “vibrations” remained just a physical or audio phenomenon – with none of the emotion we assign them today. Q: When did this change? A: It started in the 1920s, with the invention of the vibraphone. Q: The what now? A: It was also known as the vibraharp – a percussion instrument that looks like a large xylophone, yet has metal tubes hanging below that vibrate when you hit the bars on top. It played a big role in the emergence of the jazz sound. Q: What does this have to do with vibes? A: Good question. By 1940, this instrument became commonly known as the “vibes” and by the 1960s, this musical vibe came to be slang for an “instinctive feeling”. It was no doubt helped in popularity by the Beach Boys and their 1966 song, Good Vibrations. Q: That gives me excitations. A: Indeed. And from this time on, if you weren't sure about something, you’d get “bad vibes” about it. Conversely, “good vibes” were in ready supply, alongside peace and love. Q: And drugs. A: No comment. And this is what vibes (the instrument) sounds like
  7. I dunno, but I learned just now that you shouldn't google the phrase good vibrations at work. 😮
  8. Rotating in on the bottom six.
  9. They will absolutely do that. From the words of Lindy's mouth: We'll get one by the end of the year.
  10. I wasn't talking about points; I was talking about points percentage. Different animal.
  11. Even taking that into account.... the Sabres are 1/2 game out of a playoff spot. The Sabres are a half game below .500; Boston is in the last playoff spot at exactly .500. EDIT: They're actually one game out of a playoff spot. Carolina is in 11th place but at a .600 pace, so that would drop Boston to 9th, a half game behind FLA. The point is still the same: Lots of teams are off to a slow start in the East and the Sabres are right there in the pack.
  12. I'll bet there is a company (or companies) out there that offer turnkey create-a-charity services, who know all the financial and legal regulations for that kind of thing, and have "templates" for charity startups. Looks like it: https://startupsavant.com/best-nonprofit-formation-services
  13. Of on a tangent, but the "British" version of English tends to "Anglicize" word pronunciation; they say the word as if it were an English word. Canadian English aligns closer to British English than American English does. American English tends to try to pronounce the word in its native language, but the default foreign language people tend to use is Spanish. So while it doesn't affect the American pronunciation of Vegas, some words are not said anything like they are in the home language. One instance of this is Vietnam: Americans tend to pronounce the last syllable as something that rhymes with Tom, because that aligns with how you say an "a" in Spanish (like in taco). But the Vietnamese pronunciation actually rhymes with something much more like "lamb". To my ear, Vietnam (rhymes with lamb) sounds like the mispronunciation, but it's actually correct.
  14. I wonder of there are consultant firms behind professional athlete charitable startups?
  15. And the ultra rich are getting ultra richer.
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