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@roxxor
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A mission > no mission!
KONY 2012 ll watch this now if you haven’t done so already.
Soooooo cooooley!
How Boston City Hall was born
- Architects worldwide have declared Boston’s City Hall one of the greatest buildings of the 20th century. Fifty years after a groundbreaking competition, two architects look back at the project that polarized the city - and gave it a new lease on life.
And my first thought at the sight of the building was... "Oh my! It looks exactly like Shumen's city hall!"
EDITORIAL
Puffins: It’s better in Bermuda
- The National Audubon Society’s Project Puffin, which has been restoring puffins to Maine islands since the 1970s, put geolocators on eight birds. One of those bird’s journey was nothing short of amazing.
On Valentines Day in 1884, Teddy Roosevelt’s wife and mother died within hours of each other. This was his diary entry for that Thursday.
via LettersOfNote by way of Gene Weingarten.
Adulthood, Delayed: What Has the Recession Done to Millennials?
Generations are social constructs. There is no chemical or biological difference between Gen-Xers and Millennials, but we talk about them as if they were different species. That Gen-Xers grew up “independent” and Millennials grew up “entitled” aren’t anthropological observations. Rather, they’re marginally useful stereotypes. If it’s true that members of a certain age group have commonalities that they don’t fully share with older or younger groups, this isn’t the result of generational determinism. It’s just circumstance.
The circumstances surrounding the Millennial generation are particularly strange. Many came of age in the longest economic expansion of the 20th century and graduated into the worst recession since the 1930s. The abrupt contraction of opportunity has left a mark. Unemployment among 18- to 24-year-olds was 16% in 2011, twice as high as the national average. Median earnings fell more for the young than any other cohort, and college debt, most of which is held by 20-somethings, is at an all-time high.
With education comes opportunity. That’s the deal, as this generation understood it. Now, they’re the highest-educated generation in American history, and they’ve graduated into … this.
When adults wonder what’s the matter with the Millennial generation that has increasingly chosen to live with their parents and put off marriage and homeownership, the first thing to say is that they’re using the word “chosen” wrong. Nobody chose this. The economy chose for them.
Read more. [Image: Scarleth White/Flickr]
Photograph: Viktor Everstov/Reuters
24 hours in pictures - 10 February 2012
Yakutsk, Russia: A child with frosty eyelashes in -35C Siberia
Friends’ blueprint expands Esplanade access, amenities
- The Esplanade Association’s plan envisions a pedestrian walkway jutting out into the Charles River, a terrace near the Hatch Shell, and a widened bridge over Storrow Drive.
(WATERCOLOR ILLUSTRATION BY FRANK COSTANTINO)
Love it!
Courtesy of Majd Khaldi
Poses.mov (by yolandadominguez)
This video is both art and comedy at the same time. Check it out. And don’t be surprised if you see me doing this somewhere soon. — Tanya
“I’m pretty sure there’s a lot more to life than being really, really, ridiculously good looking. And I plan on finding out what that is.” — Derek Zoolander
Our future is meow. — Tanya
Catvertising (by johnst172)
8 Mind-Bending Animated GIFs By Micaël Reynaud
Mesmerizing, if ever-so-slightly nausea-inducing (am I the only one who has that problem with GIFs?). —Sarah
A must see! :X e basta.
Seven time zones, nearly 6,000 miles, and a lot of tea and borscht. That only begins to describe the long journey by David Greene, NPR’s Moscow correspondent. He’s been in Russia for just over two years and for his last reporting trip, he’s riding the Trans-Siberian Railroad from Moscow to Vladivostok.
While crossing the world’s largest country and bridging two continents, he’ll make stops to capture the mood and the culture of Russia at an important milestone, two decades after the fall of the Soviet Union.
In the photo above, Sergei Tarkhov, a geology professor and Trans-Siberian veteran, stands near the zero kilometer mark at Yaroslavsky Rail Station in Moscow.
Tag along with Greene and NPR photographer David Gilkey as they see Russia by rail.