
The gap between college and the pros has to be the largest in basketball
Sinatra's RatPack
11.7K posts

@sinatrasratpack
Love-LA Angels & Movies 1920-90, I H8 the media Author"Coffee & Cigarettes" https://t.co/p3FQ0ozIxI Podcast- https://t.co/gqyFRKEbX1

The gap between college and the pros has to be the largest in basketball

Many people genuinely believe teachers have an “easy job” with short hours, summers off, and great benefits. And yet, over the past 7 years, we’ve seen record numbers of teachers leave the profession while fewer people are choosing to enter it. Why leave such an ‘easy job’? 🙄

An overly emotional Gavin Newsom seems on the brink of tears as he describes a story he just made up.

#BREAKING: ActBlue 'may have misled Congress on its foreign donations,' lawyers warn.

Who’s the most famous person you’ve ever spoken to? Not “seen from far away” — actually talked to, even for a minute. A quick hello, a handshake, a normal conversation… and you still remember it. Who was it?

“I genuinely can't understand how the previous generation saw this in 1999 and said "this sucks".”

JUST IN: The FBI has announced charges against a brother and sister in connection with an alleged improvised explosive device that was found near the visitors center at MacDill Air Force Base in Florida last week. abcnews.link/O5J4aJ3

A big problem with Project Hail Mary: the science and engineering is so dumbed-down that it's borderline comical. Problems get solved almost magically, with no process or iteration. He meets alien life, shows it a clock, and five minutes later is having conversations. (His laptop magically translated the language, I guess.) Grace is charming (unbelievably so) but isn't shown as a good scientist. He's shown as a fantastically-lucky scientist. The Big Bang Theory had a similar problem, pretending to be a show for smart, techy people but mostly just winking at it. In other words it's pop science when the world desperately needs hard engineering to be celebrated. Still a good movie, but not nearly the classic it could and should have been.

George Lucas on the state of film and TV today: "Nobody knows what to do. The stories they're telling are just old movies. Let's do a sequel. Let's do another version of this movie. And it's not just in movies, but in almost everything, there's no original thinking. It's like I saw something, let's do something like that." Is he on to something here?