Links o’ Interest

An honest interview answer

God hates figs.

Journey’s Separate Ways – shot by shot remake

I accept your terms.

The skeptics page for The Force

Frank Miller does Charlie Brown

Neat electric ad

Fantastic Nissan ad (with Andy Richter)

Widescreen Tetris. Ridiculous!

32 songs in 8 minutes.

Very neat Youtube mashup, combining other people’s Youtube videos to make new music

Album cover generator. Oddly plausible.

Forrest Gump in one minute, in one take

The only restaurant in America that tells the truth about it’s menu. Take that Liberals!!

World War Two, simplified

Little Red Riding Hood, updated

The Future (Calvin & Hobbes)

Why the media shouldn’t image grab from Google

A guide to social networking sites

A mindblowing do-it-yourself airplane

An excellent Whose Line is it Anyway? ..with special guest star

Dwarft Punk

Pictures of unsold cars. That shows you why the car companies are dying.

Idiot Reporter and Wealthy Idiots. Really amazing innumeracy.

Credit Cards: Why and How they’re shedding customers

The bands music critics hate

The savings rate compared to disposable income. Your world in charts

5 thoughts on “Links o’ Interest”

  1. “Neat electric ad”? You’ve been down south far too long, my friend…

    (Also, your links don’t change color after they are visited. Inconvenient on a thread like this. I like these threads, thanks.)

  2. Yeah, I know — we’re terrible savers, in general. Have you ever looked at the savings rate back during WWII? 25%! Sometimes I wonder how high we’re really going to go during this recession…8%? 10%? Makes you wonder.

  3. I have to have a point now? You people never stop…

    The point was how awful it’s been, and then it’s risen significantly as the crisis hit.

  4. You twit, I was going to post the “32 songs in 8 minutes” link. You beat me to it…now I have to come up with something else. lol

    And I’m not sure which your point was in showing the savings rate chart: showing how the savings rate not only dropped from a peak of 12% in the 70’s to not only 0%, but *negative*; or showing how the rate has actually climbed back over 4% during the recession because of people hoarding their money?

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