Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

Zach Woods Talks About His Stop Motion Comedy ‘In The Know’ And The Poses We Throw To Be Seen

Zach Woods
Peacock

In The Know is funny. That’s the first and most important thing that you need to know about Peacock’s freshly released stop-motion animated workplace comedy that’s set in the world of public radio. The second most important thing that I want to call out is how well-crafted the show is. From the minds of actor/filmmaker Zach Woods, Mike Judge (Silicon Valley, Beavis And Butthead), Greg Daniels (The Office, King Of The Hill), and a vast team of puppeteers, animators, writers, actors, and artisans, In The Know looks gorgeous and feels utterly unique, mining the quirks and triggers of its dysfunctional work family for laughs while also saying something about the poses we throw.

I thought about the intricacies of pulling off a show like In The Know when I was going back over this interview with Woods, specifically when he paused for a moment to consider his answer to an early question about the intention of the show.

These kinds of interviews sometimes run on people’s ability and willingness to be front of mind and riff (having the charity of spirit to tolerate stupid questions helps too). There’s a fair bit of that here. But it’s wonderful when someone pauses to really think about a question so that they can deliver a thoughtful response, as Woods does, tying together the show, his childhood, the notion of fame, and our universal need to be seen. None of this is very surprising considering the show he’s promoting or my past conversations with the actor (The Office, Silicon Valley, Avenue 5) and filmmaker, but it’s a nice thing to advertise upfront before you dive in. So, you have that depth and clarity to look forward to. Also thoughts on the stop-motion process, the show’s use of live-action interviews, how Woods located his NPR vocal stylings, tote bags vs. cocaine, strangling Mike Judge’s balls, lazy, good-for-nothing sperm, and his condition for returning to a hypothetical reboot of The Office.

Where did your interest in using stop-motion for this come from?

The reason we chose stop-motion is because given that it is a show about fragile, slightly breakable, kind of precious little people who are being controlled by forces that are beyond their own awareness, puppetry seemed like a perfect medium to capture that. And then something we discovered as we were going is that because each character is animated by 30 different animators, there’s kind of a multifacetedness bred into each character as a result of that process because you have 30 different parents basically for each character. So there’s a very dynamic way of bringing a character to life, I think.

The idea of these characters, specifically Lauren, being sort of performatively interesting, is that mostly about what was right for that character, or is that for you, a larger comment on the social media age and how a lot of people are?

Wow, that’s a great question. I think when I was growing up, I was in a very verbal family. There was a degree of intellectual sparring and there was this sort of feeling that you had to have very sophisticated taste or something. I don’t know where it was from, but there’s just this, I don’t know, I guess I felt like I had to be eloquent. Sorry, I want to figure out a way to say this that really does justice to that question.

Here’s what I think: I think I, like many people, have spent large swaths of my life feeling like in order to be lovable, I have to be in some way remarkable or something. And I think that’s a dangerous and backward assumption. I think what makes us lovable is generally not our flashiest parts, but our most human parts. But it’s very, very hard to believe that about yourself. I find it very easy to believe about other people because you witness other people. And if I think about the people I love, sure, many of them are intelligent, many of them are smart, many of them are funny, but that’s not really what I love about them. What I love about them is some sort of mushy humanness that I could never really articulate.

I think that pressure is connected to what you’re saying about social media where you’re branding yourself or you’re performing yourself or you’re being branded by somebody else, or the kind of tyranny of a marketing approach to every aspect of human life is fucked up. It makes everyone lonely and inadequate feeling. I mean, I’m all for marketing when it’s marketing, but when you find yourself marketing yourself in intimate relationships or in your workplace when you’re with your colleagues who you’re ostensibly trying to do something meaningful with, that’s when it can start to feel like it’s a kind of slow-acting acid test on everything good about you. Does that make sense?

It absolutely does. To me, I suffer from people pleasing. I think when you don’t realize these ways that you kind of contort yourself to win people’s affection, I don’t know… It’s like being numb and not realizing the acid and then you just look down at your skeleton. That got dark.

No, I think you’re right. I agree. Now I’m going to become insufferable and long-winded as usual.

Please.

Here’s what I’ll say. I think a lot of people want to be famous because they’re lonely and they think if they’re seen, they will be known. But they are very different things. To be seen in a kind of literal way is very different from being known or understood or cared for. And I think it can be this kind of bizarre narcotic where people want to be seen so they feel less lonely, but then they’re seen and they still feel as lonely as ever. So then they need to be seen even more. And there’s this kind of addiction to it because you’re just hoping with one more view, with one more success, with one more award, that someone will actually know who you are.

But I don’t think that’s the right place to go looking for that, and that’s hardly a novel idea. But I think that’s one thing, and something that truly hadn’t occurred to me until this moment talking to you is that I guess each of the characters (in In The Know) is contorting themselves in some unnatural way. For Lauren, he’s trying to seem urbane and sophisticated and smart, and no pun intended, but “in the know.” For Fabian, I think she’s so vulnerable and feels so dismissed and marginalized that she’s sort of posturing as this sort of bellicose culture warrior when really I think she feels invisible in a way. And she’s screaming so much partly because I think she’s worried that no one gives a shit about her or the fact that she’s in pain or what she actually believes. Barb I think is shrinking herself down to the size of a thimble because she feels like that’s what’s expected of her and that’s how people value her.

How do you find the right combination in terms of these characters? What helps you balance Fabian versus Lauren? Each character is unique, but they all fit together, which is sort of the magic of a workplace comedy, and I feel like you guys really aced it here.

Thanks. Most shows have a family at the center of them. And in this case, it’s not a biological family, it’s not even a chosen family. It’s an unchosen, non-biological family that these people are all part of. And we would talk about them that way, where Barb is a kind of long-suffering self-sacrificing mother. Lauren is an indulged baby boy. Fabian’s an agro teen. Chase is the golden retriever. Sandy is the weird stowaway who rents a room above the garage. Carl is the soft-spoken, well-intended dad who is out in his workshop with his copies of Popular Mechanics all weekend, but who will pick you up from the airport even if it’s 3:00 AM.

Finding these kind of archetypes, familial archetypes, was helpful. I think another thing that’s helpful is to try to remember what each of their core kind of little kids are. It sounds a little facile, like inner child shit, whatever. But we try to enjoy the more obnoxious, outlandish behavior while simultaneously staying connected to the core vulnerabilities that results in that obnoxious behavior.

This is sort of like a who’s your favorite kid kind of question, but is it more fun for you when you’re doing the interviews on the show with someone that you’ve worked with before and who you have that built-in rapport with like Hugh Laurie, or is it more fun when you’re doing it with someone like Mike Tyson? And hey, I don’t know your life, maybe you and Mike Tyson go way back and hang out all the time.

Mike Tyson and I have a stitch and bitch where we get together and just kind of quietly crochet stuff, but it’s both. In other words, they’re different kinds of fun. So with Hugh Laurie, it’s like doing a scene together and it’s kind of playing off of each other. With someone like Mike Tyson, it’s just that I’m so fascinated by him, and he also is so smart and surprising and contradictory. So the pleasure of talking to Mike Tyson was more like what I would imagine it feels like to be an interviewer talking to an interesting subject. And the pleasure of working with someone like Hugh Laurie, is that it’s almost like doing an improv scene with someone you’ve worked with a bunch of times. So they tickle kind of different nerve centers. What a gross way of saying something was fun. They tickle nerve centers? It’s both creepy and bizarrely clinical.

Sounds moist.

I regret everything I’ve done that led me to this point in my life where I made that metaphor.

Lauren’s voice is somewhat close to your own, but there’s still that NPR voice. How did you get to the NPR place?

I think random pauses and a kind of puckish naughty quality. They always have this kind of intellectual naughty boy, like we were provoking, we’re challenging some sacred cows. And I always thought that that was kind of crazy and interesting. But unfortunately and fortunately, I am very close to Lauren Caspian.

Tote bags as a giveaway — useful or bullshit?

I mean, as far as swag goes, it’s pretty good. I got to admit.

I guess. There are better things.

Yeah, I mean, listen. Small vials of potent cocaine would be preferred, but barring that, I’ll take the tote bag.

Man, they really took care of you guys on Silicon Valley, huh?

They did a really nice job.

It’s not TV, it’s HBO.

(Laughs) That’s right, that’s right. You know what I’m talking about.

That was Mike Judge’s real voice at the end the In The Know season finale, right? His real singing voice. He’s like an angel.

(Laughs) Oh, yeah. Yeah, he’s an angel. We had to tie twine around his testicles until they lost circulation so that he could hit those notes, but it was worth it, for me at least. He’s a gamer. He doesn’t feel great about the process, but I was like, “Mike, it’s a really good 20 seconds.”

Yeah, so of course now he has passive sperm (just like Wood’s character on the show) because of that. May I overshare with you?

Please.

At this point, we’re such good friends… So I had to go through the whole process of getting (fertility) tested (like Lauren), and the word they used was not passive sperm. It was lazy.

Are you fucking kidding me?!

So when I was watching this, I was like, that must be just a much nicer doctor because mine was like, “It’s lazy.” I was like, all right, well, judgment.

It’s a character judgment. That’s fucking crazy that it’s like not only are they not doing what you want them to do, but it’s because of a deficit of work ethic.

Yeah. There’s no ambition.

Your sperm is potheads.

I may consult a urologist for this article. I’m wondering if there’s a clinical distinction between lazy and passive sperm.

(Laughs) I was told this was for the New England Journal of Medicine. Is this not?

I do have one last question and this allows me to put in the headline that I asked you about The Office. There’s been some talk about a reboot. If there was a chance to go back and play Gabe again, is that something you’d be interested in?

No. I will only play Erin. That is the only way I would agree, is if they’ll dye my hair red, put some freckles on my face and allow me to be the plucky source of optimism and good feeling in The Office.

The first season of ‘In The Know’ is available to stream on Peacock

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

Why Are The Northern Lights So Great This Year And Where Can You See Them?

Northern Lights
Merle

If you’ve been dreaming of watching the Aurora Borealis do her thing and dance across the sky — this is your year! Expedia surveyed travelers and found that chasing the Northern Lights is the most sought-after travel experience of the year, with nearly half of travelers dreaming of catching nature’s shimmering technicolored light display this year — even more so than other bucket list experiences such as seeing Egypt’s Pyramids or walking along The Great Wall of China.

So why 2024 of all years? Where should you see the Aurora Borealis? Read on for the details!

Why 2024 Is For Aurora Chasing

Northern Lights above an Igloo
Dave Sandford

2024 is gearing up to be the best year for majestic Aurora Borealis viewings across the Northern Hemisphere in over a decade. In the path of the Northern Lights, displays will be more frequent, longer, and brighter as we approach the solar maximum period at the end of solar cycle 25 between now and early 2025.

Basically, the Northern Lights follow an 11-year cycle of solar activity, with the middle period providing the most intense activity — which is what we’re witnessing now. The current cycle began in 2019 entering the solar maximum period in 2023 which should peak before 2026. A few years from now, the show will be over (for now) as there will be less activity from the sun.

Where To See The Northern Lights

To try your luck at catching the sulfurous green sheen ripple across the expanse of the night sky, you need to be in the Auroral Oval. It’s best to book your trip around the new moon for optimal dark skies — avoid the full moon and be sure to check weather conditions for the time of year you’re visiting.

Depending on the destination, the “aurora season” is generally from August to April. Winter is the best time of year for Aurora hunting as skies are typically clearer at night — but it will be frigid so be sure to pack cold-weather gear or rent it at the destination. Avoid places with light pollution which will reduce your chances of seeing the ribbons of light across the night sky.

Canada

Northern Lights in Yellowknife, Canada
Dave Sandford

Fortunately, those of us in North America don’t have to venture far to see the lights. While they can be seen from Norway and Finland — Yellowknife, Canada is the best place to watch the shape-shifting astronomical phenomenon in North America. I visited in January for three nights and got to see nature’s phenomenal performance two nights in a row. The Aurora, which appeared as a faint gray-green color to the naked eye, stretched across the sky like a wispy rainbow.

The Yukon is known for the shape-shifting Aurora Borealis across its vast expanses. Get front-row seats for the world’s most spectacular light show in Whitehorse or Dawson City. Churchill, Manitoba boasts plenty of iconic aurora sightings and is also an epic destination for wildlife as it’s home to polar bears, wolves, and Beluga whales.

Europe

Northern Lights Lapland
Hjalmar Andersson

Iceland is rich with incredible natural landscapes in the polar regions far away from cities to photograph with the Northern Lights above them. Before heading out after dark, check Iceland’s meteorological office’s aurora forecasts. The most impressive natural light shows are from September to March.

Lapland covers ground in Norway, Sweden, Finland, and Russia and is a hot spot for its display of Auroras as it’s in the Arctic Circle and tends to have 200 nights of visible light. Abisko National Park, Kiruna, and Luleå are the best places in Sweden for the light show. On the Finnish side, Utsjoki in the far north has the most displays.

United States

Minnesota Northern Lights
John Heino

No passport? No problem. Americans can enjoy nature’s light show in the Northern states.

Voyageurs National Park in Minnesota is a certified International Dark Sky Park and a hotbed of brilliant green waves of light. The State’s Boundary Waters is recognized as an International Dark Sky Sanctuary and boasts prime views of the Aurora Borealis.

Given that Alaska is the most northern part of the States, the lights can be seen from late August through mid-April with Fairbanks being a popular viewing spot. The further north you go in Alaska, the more likely you are to catch the vibrant colors in the sky.

Maine has some of the clearest night skies in the country and has a few prime Northern Lights viewing spots including Aroostook National Wildlife Refuge on the border of Canada, where you can camp overnight and Schoodic Lake and watch the aurora’s breathtaking colors reflect on the lake’s surface.

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

A Full Guide To Shopping For Duty-Free Whiskey At International Airports

Duty-Free Whiskey Shopping
Shutterstock/UPROXX

If you’re seriously into whiskey, then you know never to skip the whiskey aisles at Duty-Free at Frankfurt, Heathrow, Narita, Sydney, Schiphol, and beyond while awaiting an international flight. You’ll find hidden gems, crazy deals, and you might even find something no one else has. Yes, there are tons and tons of bottles of whiskey lining shelves at good liquor stores like Total Wine, Liquor Barn, Spec’s, Binny’s, and so many more. But those stores are missing an entire sub-set of whiskeys from massive brands to smaller operators — the Traveler or “Duty-Free” whiskey expressions.

Duty-free shopping is one of the best places to score some of the best bottles of whiskey at any given time. Yes, this requires international travel. That is an extra expense. I get that. But if you’re traveling already, then not picking up a special bottle of whiskey from Duty-Free on the way home is leaving amazing whiskey behind (and money on the table). Especially considering that a ton of great whiskeys are only released for Duty-Free shopping. We’re talking about bottles you won’t see anywhere else (outside of the secondary or aftermarket for huge price hikes).

Plus, you’ll be able to buy standards tax-free (more on that later). A win-win!

Below, I’m calling out five hard and fast rules to live by when shopping at Duty-Free for whiskey. Before we dive in, I want to clarify something. I’ll be addressing buying bottles from standard Duty-Free shops in the terminal. Serval countries’ airports have Duty-Free on the exit side of things (usually after customs). Places like Iceland, Sweden, UAE, the UK, and so on do this so that you can buy alcohol to bring into the country as tourists/locals for consumption. This is a whole different thing and is more about exorbitant alcohol taxes in the country you’re visiting than scoring deals/special bottles. I’ll be specifically covering Duty-Free shopping in international terminals for travel to and from a place while you’re waiting for your flight.

Make sense? Let’s go!

Also Read: The Top 5 UPROXX Bourbon Posts Of The Last Six Months

Duty-Free Whiskey Rule 1 — Know The Laws

Duty Free Laws
U.S. Customs And Border Protection

The biggest first step is educating yourself. There are laws that — if not followed — will cost you time and money. You can legally bring 1 liter of spirits/liquor into the U.S. from Duty-Free shopping. Hence, you’ll see that a lot of the bottles at Duty-Free are 1-liter bottles.

Here comes the “but”…

But each passenger can bring 5 liters of spirits/liquor into the U.S. if it’s checked in that passenger’s checked bags. Quick story: When traveling with a friend, we checked in, went through security, hit Duty-Free, and then exited back out and filled up a suitcase (that we left in a locker) with five 1-liter bottles and then dropped the bags at bag drop, and carried right on.

So there are ways to actually get a pretty large haul without breaking the rules. Traveling with buddies or family helps. Still, know the law. Stay within it. Otherwise, you might lose some bottles to a nosey customs agent.

Duty-Free Whiskey Rule 2 — Don’t Buy Obvious Bottles

Jim Beam Duty-Free
Shop Frankfurt Airport

This is the “no duh!” of it all. Don’t buy regular bottles of booze from Duty-Free that you can get at any old liquor store or corner shop at home. Yes, it’s “tax-free” at Duty-Free in the airports. But you’re not allowed to buy enough to have that really make a difference.

That bottle of regular-ass Jim Beam above is €13. That’s $14. And it’s a half-liter bottle (the standard is .75l…!). A regular .75l bottle of Beam at Total Wine is $15.

This applies to Scotch and Japanese whiskies too. If it’s a standard bottle that everyone’s heard of, it’s not worth your time or money to buy at Duty-Free. Sometimes, you’ll see 2-for-1 deals on standard bottles — two bottles of Jack or Jameson or Chivas for one — but even then it’s barely worth it.

Why? Because you have a specific amount of alcohol that you can travel with and you’ll be wasting the bounty available to you with something that you can get anywhere anytime for basically the same price (and sometimes even less).

Duty-Free Whiskey Rule 3 — “Traveler Exclusive/Edition” Is The Most Important Term

Traveler Edition Whisky
Shop Frankfurt Airport

This is why we’re here. Yes, I buried the lede. These are the whiskeys that you want to buy. All the major brands release expressions — often stellar ones — that are only available at “Travel Retail”.

A great example of this last year was Jack Daniel’s American Single Malt Whiskey. It’s a “Traveler Exclusive” and is only available at Duty-Free shops in airports.

From there, the list runs deep. You can find high-age statement single malt Scotch whiskies that you might not have even heard of. You can find those impossible-to-find Japanese whiskies that everyone clamors for. You can find special barrel finishes that don’t see the light of day outside of airports. You’ll see bottles of your favorite brands that you’ve never seen on U.S. shores. It’s a true bounty. There’s a little something for everyone when it comes to Traveler’s Exclusive releases. The best part is that they’ll all be at MSRP without tax.

How do you find these hidden gems? They’ll be clearly marked either on the label or the price tag (or even aisle) as “Exclusives” — you can’t miss them. And if you do, simply ask. There are always super helpful people at Duty-Free whiskey shops with all the answers you’ll need answering.

Duty-Free Whiskey Rule 4 — Search For Deals/Sales

Duty-Free Whisky
Heathrow Reserve & Collect

It’s also worth just having a stroll. Sometimes on side shelves, by cash registers, and hidden away in corners behind some glass, you’ll find sales, discounted items, and “must-go” prices. I’ve found a super rare Jack Daniel’s Gold Label marked down 60% at Edinburgh’s Duty-Free. I bought the last two.

I’ve also seen (and bought) some marked-down Bowmore’s, Taliskers, The Macallans, Ardbegs, and so many more from the previous year’s vintage that were taking up space for the incoming new vintages. In Heathrow, was able to buy a 30-year-old Bowmore for 50% off simply because it was a 2021 vintage and the 2022s had already arrived. I had to look for the bottle — it was sort of hidden on the far end of a glassed-in aisle — but finding it saved me over $1,000 off the original sticker price.

Admittedly, this is a rarer way to shop Duty-Free whiskey. It’s a sort of right place, right time vibe. Still, you could get amazingly lucky and find a true gem for an amazing price.

Duty-Free Whiskey Rule 5 — Plan Ahead And Win

Duty-Free Whiskeys
Shop Frankfurt Airport

Another great way to master Duty-Free whiskey shopping in 2024 is to use the Internet. Most huge airports have their Duty-Free shopping online now. You can “click and collect” on special deals, watch sales, and keep track of what’s coming in.

  • Heathrow’s online Duty-Free shop pretty much gives you 10% off any bottle with some bottles marked down 20%. If you’re looking at a $1,000 bottle, that’s a significant savings.
  • Frankfurt is another big online retailer that you can use beforehand and collect when you’re at the airport. They also deliver to addresses in Germany — like hotel rooms.
  • Tokyo-Narita is another good online shop to peruse before you travel. There are a ton of super unique whiskies available there that you simply won’t see anywhere else at legitimately great suggested retail prices. Just make sure to have the currency converter pulled up on your phone.
  • Schiphol (Amsterdam) has a cool “Shop & Collect” program where your purchased items will be waiting for you in a locker in the middle of the main terminal (once you pass security and immigration). You get a code, find the lockers, and voila! There’s your booze.

And look, it’s really easy, folks. Simply Google “(Airport name) Duty-Free shopping” and you’ll be taken to these online shops if they’re they exist. From there, you can figure it out pretty easily.

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

The Amaretto Sour Is The Perfect Way To Ease Into ‘Wet February’ — Here’s Our Recipe

Amaretto Sour
Shutterstock/UPROXX

The Amaretto Sour is a magical drink. It’s naturally sweet and nutty, on the lower end of the alcohol spectrum, and hella frothy and creamy. It has everything to make it the perfect ease back into drinking cocktail for “Wet February”.

The Amaretto Sour has gone through a bit of a facelift over the past 20 years or so. Jeffery Morganthaler of Portland’s famed Pacific Standard re-invented the drink in the early 2010s. He elevated the sipper from a simple mix of Amaretto and sour mix into a proper sour with real depth and a touch of bourbon kick, egg white creaminess, and lemony goodness.

Below, I’ll be making a now-classic Morganthaler Amaretto Sour, which has become the standard at most bars worldwide. It’s delightfully delicious and easy enough to shake that you’ll be shaking up more than one once you get the hang of it.

Let’s dive in!

Also Read: The Top Five Cocktail Recipes of the Last Six Months

Amaretto Sour

Amaretto Sour
Zach Johnston

Ingredients

  • 1.5 oz. Amaretto
  • 0.5 oz. bourbon
  • 1 oz. fresh lemon juice
  • 0.25 oz. simple syrup
  • 1 medium egg white
  • Lemon peel
  • Amarena cherries
  • Ice

Morganthaler’s Amaretto Sour calls for a high-proof or cask-strength bourbon. And that’s great. I lean more toward a standard-proof bourbon with great depth and profile. For me, that’s something like Rabbit Hole’s Cavehill Four-Grain Bourbon. It’s a wonderful and balanced bourbon where a little goes a long way.

The rest is all easily found anywhere good liquor and groceries are sold.

Amaretto Sour
Zach Johnston

What You’ll Need:

  • Rocks glass
  • Cocktail shaker
  • Cocktail strainer
  • Paring knife
  • Hand juicer
  • Fine strainer
  • Barspoon
  • Jigger
  • Cocktail stick
Amaretto Sour
Zach Johnston

Method:

  • Fill the rocks glass with ice and set aside.
  • Add the Amaretto, bourbon, lemon juice, simple, and egg white to a cocktail shaker. Affix the lid and shake without ice for 15 seconds.
  • Pop the lid and add a handful of fresh ice to the shaker, reaffix the lid, and then shake for another 15 seconds or until the shaker is frosted over and ice-cold to touch.
  • Pop the lid and strain the cocktail into the waiting rocks glass. You’ll need to really shake out the foam as you strain.
  • Peel a thin stripe of lemon peel and twist it over the cocktail, making a twirled pigtail. Spear two cherries and garnish the glass with the cherries and lemon peel. Serve.

Bottom Line:

Amaretto Sour
Zach Johnston

Yeah, this is a winner. It’s so creamy and lush with a deep nuttiness — thanks to the hazelnut liqueur. The lemon really brightens it up and gives the boozy foundation and a nice balance of sweet and tart. The sweetness does come through with a touch of sugar syrup and a very sweet Amaretto base.

Look, it’s a great cocktail. It’s easy enough to make. So, hit up the liquor store and shake one up. You’ll be very pleasantly surprised by this one.

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

A guy found an unused $8 Disney World ticket from 1978 and tried to get into the park

Matthew Ables’ family had a Magic Kingdom coupon book from 1978 sitting in a desk drawer and he thought it was an old souvenir.

“It’s been collecting dust since before I was born and I always assumed it was an old family keepsake until I realized that it’s never been used and there’s no expiration date,” he said while inspecting the ticket book with a magnifying glass, in a TikTok video with over 9 million views.

“Which means I’ve either found the golden ticket here, or I’m delusional thinking that the Mouse is going to let me use it to get inside nearly half a century later,” he continued.


So, he flew to Orlando, Florida, to see if it would work.

I tried getting into Disney World using a 46 year old ticket #disneyworld #disney #themepark #funny #fyp

@matthewables

I tried getting into Disney World using a 46 year old ticket #disneyworld #disney #themepark #funny #fyp

Upon arriving at a ticket booth at the Magic Kingdom, Matthew got nervous because the woman who worked there began “aggressively” stamping “VOID” on his coupon book and then left. Luckily, she returned with a yellow ticket he could use to get into the park.

It’s fantastic that Disney honored the ticket even though it was 46 years old. Especially because today, that would have cost $164, which shows that Disney World prices have risen much, much higher than inflation.

If ticket prices rose with inflation, it would only cost $37.64 to get into the Magic Kingdom in 2024.

Some of the commenters on the video noted that people showing up with extremely old tickets isn’t uncommon at Disney parks. “I used to work Magic Kingdom Guest Relations. This exact scenario would happen a few times a week!” Allison wrote.

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

Neil deGrasse Tyson says ‘everyone is special’ for a cosmic reason most wouldn’t consider

Science educator, astrophysicist and author Neil deGrasse Tyson has an incredible talent for taking complex ideas about the cosmos and making them more accessible for the average person to understand.

In a clip from a conversation with Steve Berlett on the “Diary of a CEO Podcast,” Tyson flips the script and uses the cosmos to help us better understand ourselves. But there’s one big problem getting in the way of coming to this universal understanding: our egos.

“Your ego is incompatible with the cosmic perspective,” Tyson says in the clip. “The cosmic perspective shows you how small we are, in size, in time, in space, and if you go in with a high ego, you might resist that. You might say, ‘No, I’m important.’ But I think of it differently.”


Tyson believes we can push past the feeling of insignificance that comes with understanding the vastness of the universe by realizing how we are inseparable from everything in the cosmos.

“We know one of the greatest gifts of modern astrophysics to civilization, dare I call it a gift, is the knowledge that the atoms of your body are traceable, not only to The Big Bang, origin of the universe itself, but especially to stars that manufactured those elements and later in their lives, on death, exploded scattering that enrichment across gas clouds,” Tyson says in the clip. “So that their next generation of stars would have planets. And on at least one of those planets, life.”

“So, we are not just figuratively, we are literally stardust,” he continues. “You have kingship with the cosmos. That feeling to me is greater than any other you could have possibly walked into the room with.”

The notion that we are made of stardust isn’t entirely new, but it needs to be repeated so every generation can understand. Astronomer Carl Sagan popularized it in his 1973 book “The Cosmic Connection: An Extraterrestrial Perspective” in the following passage:

“Our Sun is a second- or third-generation star. All of the rocky and metallic material we stand on, the iron in our blood, the calcium in our teeth, the carbon in our genes were produced billions of years ago in the interior of a red giant star. We are made of star-stuff.”

Sagan hosted TV’s original “Cosmos: A Personal Voyage (1980-81). Tyson hosted the follow-ups, “Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey” (2014) and “Cosmos: Possible Worlds” (2020).

Tyson argues that connection with the universe is what makes us special. Not the unique qualities and characteristics that we have been taught to value. For the astrophysicist, being of this universe and made of such formidable material is enough for us to consider ourselves special.

“So why not look around and say, ‘I’m not special because I’m different. I’m special because I’m the same as you, as others, as the tree, as the brook, as the animals, you know, the woodland creatures,” Tyson said. “And we can all sit here and look up at the night sky and say, ‘Yes, we have kinship with the cosmos.’ I feel large because of that, not small.”

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

Tina Fey Reunites With Two Of Her ’30 Rock’ Costars In A Ad Featuring Multiple Tinas

Tina Fey has been popping up all over the place lately. Fey’s new Gen Z-infused Mean Girls movie hit theaters last month, she is slated to star in a new Netflix adaptation of The Four Seasons, and it seems like she is next in line to take over when Lorne Michaels decides to give up his little SNL project. So why would Fey be in an ad campaign for Booking.com? It’s because she’s just so booked and busy.

Fey appears in a new ad for the travel company while boasting that you can be “whoever you want” to be on vacation. This is only true for some people. But she was able to bring along some of her friends to help show off various versions of herself, including her 30 Rock co-stars Jane Krakowski and Jack McBrayer.

Krakowski appears as “Splurgy Tina” who spends her time at swanky hotels on Rodeo Drive, while “Rustic Tina” joins McBrayer in a remote cabin. The kicker (every Super Bowl ad has to have one) is when Glen Close arrives as a version of “Wild Tina” who is on a horse (thanks, patriarchy!).

Check out the ad above then book yourself a nice scenic getaway to a dazzling hotel! Nothing bad will happen!!

(Via EW)

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

LeBron James Ripped Media For Criticizing Joel Embiid For Missing Games And Then Getting Hurt

joel embiid lebron james
Getty Image

Joel Embiid has been having one of the great scoring seasons we’ve ever seen in the NBA, as the reigning league MVP currently holds averages of 35.3 points, 11.3 rebounds, and 5.7 assists per game on 53.3/36.6/88.3 shooting splits. Those numbers made him a frontrunner for MVP once again, however the league’s new 65 games played mandate for awards consideration loomed as the All-Star break approached.

The Sixers star center has sat here and there with knee soreness, most recently missing two games in Denver and Portland. He was a late add to the injury report for the Nuggets game (earning Philly a $75,000 fine) and he’s received plenty of heat from some in the NBA media world for sitting out games at a seemingly disproportional rate when facing top competition or being on the road. However, when Embiid did opt to play in Tuesday’s loss to the Warriors, it was clear from the start that he wasn’t quite right, and then disaster struck in the fourth quarter when Jonathan Kuminga landed on his outstretched left knee while going for a loose ball.

Embiid suffered a lateral mensicus injury from the collision and his timetable for a return is unknown. Although Nick Nurse said it was unrelated to his knee soreness that had kept him out of two games, there was plenty of frustration in Philly about whether he should’ve been playing in the first place. That also led to backlash to those who have criticized him for missing time in the past, with the most notable of those to take up for Embiid being LeBron James, who lit into those who critiqued him for missing games without understanding his health situation.

Load management and stars sitting out has become such a big topic in the NBA, with the league only fueling those debates with this new mandate, and the truth is, it’s a topic that’s almost impossible to talk about with the appropriate tact and context. As LeBron notes, we don’t know what a player is actually dealing with health-wise and the constant desire to have a take — and just generally the toxic nature of the debate around the MVP award — has led to some being far too comfortable making declarative statements about someone’s health.

No matter how many times people make note that players want to play and its teams and training staffs that are almost always dictating rest days, we end up using rest and health question marks as referendums on the players themselves. While Embiid’s injury on Tuesday probably happens whether he’s healthy or not (a man falling on your knee and bending it backwards is going to cause damage pretty much no matter what), it is a reminder that we should probably not use players injury designations as a point of criticism of their game or desire to compete in a sport that takes such a physical toll.

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

LeBron James Ripped Media For Criticizing Joel Embiid For Missing Games And Then Getting Hurt

joel embiid lebron james
Getty Image

Joel Embiid has been having one of the great scoring seasons we’ve ever seen in the NBA, as the reigning league MVP currently holds averages of 35.3 points, 11.3 rebounds, and 5.7 assists per game on 53.3/36.6/88.3 shooting splits. Those numbers made him a frontrunner for MVP once again, however the league’s new 65 games played mandate for awards consideration loomed as the All-Star break approached.

The Sixers star center has sat here and there with knee soreness, most recently missing two games in Denver and Portland. He was a late add to the injury report for the Nuggets game (earning Philly a $75,000 fine) and he’s received plenty of heat from some in the NBA media world for sitting out games at a seemingly disproportional rate when facing top competition or being on the road. However, when Embiid did opt to play in Tuesday’s loss to the Warriors, it was clear from the start that he wasn’t quite right, and then disaster struck in the fourth quarter when Jonathan Kuminga landed on his outstretched left knee while going for a loose ball.

Embiid suffered a lateral mensicus injury from the collision and his timetable for a return is unknown. Although Nick Nurse said it was unrelated to his knee soreness that had kept him out of two games, there was plenty of frustration in Philly about whether he should’ve been playing in the first place. That also led to backlash to those who have criticized him for missing time in the past, with the most notable of those to take up for Embiid being LeBron James, who lit into those who critiqued him for missing games without understanding his health situation.

Load management and stars sitting out has become such a big topic in the NBA, with the league only fueling those debates with this new mandate, and the truth is, it’s a topic that’s almost impossible to talk about with the appropriate tact and context. As LeBron notes, we don’t know what a player is actually dealing with health-wise and the constant desire to have a take — and just generally the toxic nature of the debate around the MVP award — has led to some being far too comfortable making declarative statements about someone’s health.

No matter how many times people make note that players want to play and its teams and training staffs that are almost always dictating rest days, we end up using rest and health question marks as referendums on the players themselves. While Embiid’s injury on Tuesday probably happens whether he’s healthy or not (a man falling on your knee and bending it backwards is going to cause damage pretty much no matter what), it is a reminder that we should probably not use players injury designations as a point of criticism of their game or desire to compete in a sport that takes such a physical toll.

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

Does your period pain feel ‘as bad as a heart attack’? You’re not imagining it

Here’s an article to send to every jerk in your life who denied you the right to complain about your period cramps: A medical expert says that some women experience menstruation pains that are “almost as bad as having a heart attack.” John Guillebaud, who is a professor of reproductive health at University College London, spoke to Quartz on the subject, and said that the medical community has long ignored what can be a debilitating affliction, because it’s a problem that mostly inconveniences women.

“I think it happens with both genders of doctor,” Guillebaud told Quartz. “On the one hand, men don’t suffer the pain and underestimate how much it is or can be in some women. But I think some women doctors can be a bit unsympathetic because either they don’t get it themselves or if they do get it they think, ‘Well I can live with it, so can my patient.'”


And it’s a problem that can’t just be treated with common painkillers. Some people who experience dysmenorrhea, the medical term for painful menstruation, also suffer from endometriosis, a condition that can cause infertility if it’s not treated properly. But research on the subject is scant, so doctors often misdiagnose it, or dismiss the pain entirely. It’s estimated, however, that one out of 10 women has the condition.

Earlier this month, Girls creator Lena Dunham was forced to take a rest from show promotion and other work duties because she suffers from endometriosis. In a recent edition of her newsletter, Lenny Letter, Dunham wrote a frank essay about her struggle with the condition, and particularly with a medical institution that didn’t know how to diagnose her. She didn’t know how to put a name to her pain until she turned 24 and underwent laparoscopic surgery, “which is the only way to definitively diagnose endometriosis,” according to Dunham.

Quartz reporter Olivia Goldhill had the same problem. She suffered from frequent period pains that were as distressing as a slipped disk, she says. But doctors had no answer for her. “Before I had my MRI scans, I told my primary care doctor that the pain seemed to be triggered by my period,” she said. “He didn’t think this was relevant and ignored the comment.”

For now, the medical community has been dragging its feet to do research on the subject. Goldhill says the only thing people can do right now is talk about it, to heighten awareness. “Tell your doctor, your friends, your colleagues,” she wrote. “We need to talk about period pain long and loudly enough for doctors to finally do something about it.”

This article originally appeared on 09.14.17