Hi Amber
I’ve been working on Sonic comercials for the past two weeks. This is an article about how they were conceived and created by a Kansas City Agency, Barkley.
They are some of the best jobs ever. Great crew, fast days, and alot of fun. It’s been a great July.
(via ambest)
Next to man, goat has always been known and dog’s second best friend.
“NBC has scheduled 3,600 hours of Olympics programming on its main network, along with Telemundo, USA, Oxygen, MSNBC, CNBC and Bravo. That’s the equivalent of eight days of programming packed into each day.” [emphasis mine] ok, so…how did we get fat? cognitive surplus what?
That’s alot of networks/programing that I won’t be watching. Haven’t the ratings for the olympics gone down every time? Nice logic, NBC.
This is the best facebook discussion ever.
So, this girl found a Chinese DVD of AD, that was then translated back into English. Some of these quotes are hilarious.
Instead of this:
Tobias: Excuse me, I’m just looking for a marker…a MAGIC marker.
It’s This:
Do obeisance: Interrupt once, I am seeking a mark pen. A sorcery mark pen.
Routine Traffic Stop
So, I drove in from a long Wichita shoot tonight. As I exited the highway, a cop pulls me over. I wasn’t speeding. I signaled. He says I failed to signal as I cut across two lanes, but the second lane was an exit ramp that was just beginning.
So, he asks me where I was headed, and where I was coming from. I tell him I’d rather not say, because that’s my right (see fifth amendment).
fifteen minutes later - there are now three cop cars behind me. The officer approaches again and demands I step out of the vehicle. I contest this decision, but am told I have no right to stay in my car. I exit and follow him to a second officer.
I step out to find a drug canine, shepherded by the third officer, walking to my car. I suggest this is an illegal search, but apparently the dog can do a “free air sniff” without a warrant.
The cop tells me now that not only is he giving me a ticket for my lane change, but also one of my tag lights is out, so that’s an additional citation. I nod and accept my paper work, noting the court date, when I’ll be contesting everything.
The second cop is the “good cop”. He asks me about a bumper sticker, and acts like he cares. He tries to joke a little. They thought I was the real deal.
The dog sniffs around and finds nothing of course. The cop says I’m free to go. As I head toward my car, he asks me “why were you so obstinate?” I reply “I know my rights”.
Barack Obama (via azspot:squashed:rhodyram:soupsoup) (via seriouslythough) (via julyshewillfly)
I’m sorry. But Barack Obama is just wrong. That isn’t what Democracy demands at all. Democracy doesn’t demand that you abandon your personal values to achieve universal goals. The beauty of Democracy is that it allows all points of view a voice. It doesn’t ask those points of view to meld into one voice. In fact, if all the voices are forced to speak as a single voice, that is the opposite of Democracy. How many of you have “Dissent is the highest form of Patriotism” bumper stickers?
As a Christian, I can accept that my views will be “subject to argument” but I am still within my rights to reject those arguments (or, gasp…. even ignore them). I don’t ask that you believe what I do. But I demand that you respect my right to believe what I do. You may think I’m wrong, but I have a Constitutional right to be wrong.
This idea that our beliefs can somehow be separate from the policies we pursue is idiotic. Using Obama’s example, if my values say that abortion is wrong, it’s ludicrous to think that I would wish not to see that value implemented as public policy. I do believe in the inerrancy of the Bible, but its not just a list of do’s and don’ts. That’s a strawman argument. Only shallow faith would believe something simply because “God says so.” Believers also see the reasons why God says the things He says. He knows what’s best for us in the long run. They’re not just rules and regulations. It’s an instruction manual for life.
God knows that there are consequences when we live lives in a manner in which everything is disposable, including people. He knows that there are emotional consequences to a flippant regard for life and these are the arguments that anti-abortion advocates have been expressing since the beginning of the debate. However, that argument has been summarilly dismissed since it is seen as “just coming from the Bible”. It matters not that there is strong evidence that abortion is emotionally damaging to women. It matters not that a culture that promotes abortion is more prone to sexual promiscuity. Maybe God was right all along?
Look at it this way… If I tell my 2 year old, “don’t climb on top of the refrigerator,” I am imposing a directive on him which he can choose to heed or ignore. He has free will. If he trusts that I have his best interests at heart, he may learn (in time) that that rule is really just to protect him and not because I’m a tyrant.
That’s the way God works. He just knows what’s best for us. He doesn’t instruct us to value human life because he wants 13 year old girls having babies. He instructs us to value human life because He knows that if we do, we will learn to be personally responsible for our actions. Even when it’s inconvenient.
(via complicatedshoes)
a good example of this is the recent notion of a ‘secular’ sabbath: turning off all electronic communication for a day. the fourth commandment was such a good idea that even (some) atheists love it! this is the thrust of God’s communication with humanity, instruction based on what’s best for us, not what necessarily we like (though ultimately valuable) or is reasoned to be right (which is, at best an educated guess) at the time.
tim keller has a good breakdown of the debate which basically hinges not on the beliefs themselves, but on the value and/or validity of one’s personal beliefs (religious or not) in public policy.
(via hilker)