Patrick B Lyons retweetledi
Patrick B Lyons
65 posts

Patrick B Lyons
@PBLyons_
“Force is force...matter is matter...will is will...the infinite is the infinite...nothing is nothing” -Tolstoy
Katılım Şubat 2018
147 Takip Edilen17 Takipçiler
Patrick B Lyons retweetledi
Patrick B Lyons retweetledi

This is a math class this morning at @MIT. This is the state of learning and ‘free speech’ at our top universities. It would not be happening without a failure leadership at MIT.
Imagine being a student who borrowed $250k to attend MIT or a professor who is trying to do research in this environment.
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Patrick B Lyons retweetledi

30 years ago, Vince Vaughn played @NDFootball tailback Jamie O'Hara in the classic 'Rudy'
Now on ESPN's @CollegeGameDay w/ @jess_sims, the letterman jacket still fits. It's Vaughn's 3rd visit to the show as guest picker. 🍀

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Patrick B Lyons retweetledi
Patrick B Lyons retweetledi
Patrick B Lyons retweetledi

@Grimezsz @anyma_eva It’s kinda sad that everyone feels the need to record on their phones instead of just fully enjoying and experiencing the moment
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Patrick B Lyons retweetledi

People spend more time watching YouTube on a TV than ABC and CBS put together.
They spend more time watching Netflix on a TV than NBC and Fox combined.
TV Grim Reaper@TVGrimReaper
From my friendly source: June primetime avg. viewership, Live+3 Day for linear TV, millions. YouTube (no live TV) 4.8 Netflix 4.5 ABC 2.5 CBS 2.1 Hulu (no live TV) 2.0 NBC 1.8 Amazon Prime 1.8 Fox 1.5 Disney+ 1.1 Fox News 1.1 MSNBC 0.8 Max 0.8 Tubi 0.8 ION 0.7 Peacock 0.6
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Patrick B Lyons retweetledi

If there had been a Chinese on the ship in Ridley Scott's Alien they woulda been like mmm dinner and the film would have been over in the first act
ţară ♿☸🎡 { 𝔅ℜ𝔊 }@8noblest
China is 300,000,000 years behind the west
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Patrick B Lyons retweetledi

A university janitor who turned off a freezer after hearing multiple “annoying alarms,” ruined more than 20 years of research, according to a lawsuit filed against his employer by Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in upstate New York cnn.it/44ilOLH
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Patrick B Lyons retweetledi
Patrick B Lyons retweetledi
Patrick B Lyons retweetledi

In the back of a comedy club, a struggling comedian got a chance to talk to Jerry Seinfeld.
He said he’d been struggling and sacrificing for about 10 years to “make it” as a comedian. Approaching his 30s, he was worried he’d taken the wrong path.
Seinfeld gave him this advice:
“This [pointing at the stage] is such a special thing,” Seinfeld says. “This has nothing to do with ‘making it.’”
“But did you ever stop and compare your life?” the struggling comedian says. “I see my friends, and they’re making a lot of money. They’re moving up. They’re all married. They’re all having kids. They have houses. They have a sense of normality.”
Seinfeld makes a disgusted face and then says, “let me tell you a story. This is my favorite story about show business.”
“Glenn Miller's orchestra is doing a gig...They can't land the plane because it's winter, a snowy night—they have to land in this field and walk to the gig.
They're dressed in their suits. They’re carrying their instruments. They’re walking through the snow—it's wet and slushy.
And in the distance they see this little house…They go up to the house and look in the window.
Inside they see this family.
There's a guy and his wife—she’s beautiful. There's two kids, and they're all sitting around the table. They’re smiling. They're laughing. There's a fire in the fireplace...
These guys are standing there in their suits. They're wet and shivering, holding their instruments, and they're watching this incredible Norman Rockwell scene.
And one guy turns to another guy and goes, 'How do people live like that?'
That's what it's about.”
Takeaway 1:
Comparison, it is said, is the thief of joy.
James Altucher has written about a cure for comparison.
Usually, when we compare ourselves to someone, we compare ourselves to a select few aspects of their life (their house, their good looks, or their professional success, etc.).
Instead, James writes, “picture that you can change places in every way with them. But then it’s forever...Would you do it.”
Usually—as Seinfeld’s story illustrates—the answer is…no, you wouldn’t want their whole life.
Takeaway 2:
One of the differences between Seinfeld and the struggling comedian is the way in which they view comedy.
The struggling comedian sees comedy as a means to some end—there’s some amount of money or celebrity that would make him feel like he “made it.”
For Seinfeld, comedy is an end in itself. “[It] has nothing to do with ‘making it,’” as he said.
For Seinfeld, as Ryan Holiday once told me, “The work is the win.”
- - -
“The set I get to do tonight at 7:20 PM is the win. I get to do comedy—I won. It being predicated on doing X or being bigger than Y—no, no, no. To me, it’s always just been about the work. I’m on house money, full-time.” — Hasan Minhaj
Follow @bpoppenheimer for more content like this!
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Patrick B Lyons retweetledi
Patrick B Lyons retweetledi
Patrick B Lyons retweetledi
Patrick B Lyons retweetledi

I once suggested a TV series to Richard Scarry’s lovely family with @nexusstories and we spent a few days making a pig. It didn't happen in the end, but I’m still quite fond of Mr Frumble here (modelling by Nur Diker, light + render by Florian Caspar)
#richardscarry #pulledpork
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Patrick B Lyons retweetledi
Patrick B Lyons retweetledi

Patrick B Lyons retweetledi

In 1972, the Yankees asked former players for their most outstanding experience at Yankee Stadium.
Mickey Mantle’s response was so lewd and graphic it could never be printed.
The original is up for auction for the first time at @Lelandsdotcom.


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