RIP Wassily Kandinsky
You would've loved Uber Eats
— @dank.lloyd.wright
I don't have a really good answer, except for the fact that I'm finding that I'm an earnest person.
— I (potentially paraphrased)*
And what he learned in the end was what he had already known before he ever got there. The only difference, but it was a large difference, was that now he had seen it with his own eyes.
— Paul Auster, Burning Boy: The Life and Work of Stephen Crane
They suffer through the same ordeal, but three of them will live and one of them will not. Why? Not only does the question not have an answer, it has no meaning. Billy Hawkins dies. Mourn him by remembering him, remember him by mourning him. And then, if you happen to be a person who writes, put him in your story and if your story from 1897 is good enough, it will go on being read for a long time to come.
— Paul Auster, Burning Boy: The Life and Work of Stephen Crane
The weakness of such highly individual work lies in its sucess by surprise. The words which astonish, the phrases which excite wonder and admiration, come eventually to seem tricky. They lose force with repetition and come at last to be distasteful.
— Garland, via Paul Auster, Burning Boy: The Life and Work of Stephen Crane
5.8 YEARS
— Estimated Lifespan of one dollar bills, "U.S. Currency Education Program," www.uscurrency.gov
About how you really define an individual as not just your own thoughts and your own self reflection, but we're almost, he argues, more defined by how other peopele see us. Like if you walked out into the world and say suddently nobody knew who you were or recognized you, you would be in some regards deceased.
— Chris Mason on Derek Parfit's Reasons and Persons, "Chris Mason: Space Travel, Colonization, and Long-Term Survival in Space | Lex Fridman Podcast #283"
If that is what existance requires, so be it.
— CR summing up my statement on 'meanings'*
And then Crane polishes off the sentance with this somewhat bizarre notion (made more bizarre by the fact that "juke" is probably a misprint of "duke").
— Paul Auster, Burning Boy: The Life and Work of Stephen Crane
Steak medium well.
— Mom's reply to "allergies or food restrictions?"
But the law had its comical aspects as well. In The Battle with the Slum (Macmillan, 1902), Jacob Riis reports on the invention of "brick sandwiches"—a single brick clamped between two slices of bread—which were placed on bars in mocking compliance with the statute.
— Paul Auster, Burning Boy: The Life and Work of Stephen Crane
A pun can live a long time and still have legs.
— L*
Mason says "bog is bog"
— Steph in a text sending photo of 7BOG419
Former president Donald Trump initially used the Century II felt tip pen, but then -- like so many facets of his presidency -- broke with tradition, instead preferring a Sharpie.
— Leah Asmelash, "Why do presidents use so many pens to sign documents — and what happens to them?," CNN
To be absolutely honest, no one cares about the camera. They care about the flash. This flash handle is something special.
— @roadshowpbs, clip with Graflex flash
Through the CARES Act, we sent every student a black and white printer.
— MassArt professor
In The Bitcoin Standard, I present the argument that money is always whatever is the hardest thing to make.
— Saifedean Ammous, "Saifedean Ammous: Bitcoin, Anarchy, and Austrian Economics | Lex Fridman Podcast #284"
But even better is the last sentance of the article—"In the back room of the saloon, the man with the ruffled beard was silently picking hieroglyphics out of his whiskers"—which is surely one of the most beguiling, crackpot sentances Crane ever wrote.
— Paul Auster, Burning Boy: The Life and Work of Stephen Crane
Getting your money's worth.
— L*
Simply inflate the WaspOut® Hornet's nest by blowing into the open hole until all the creases are out. If needed, place your finger over the small hole at the bottom of the nest to increase the air pressure.
— WaspOut Hornet's Nest Instructions