Children believe everything their parents tell them. So when parents lie to prevent their kids to stop them from doing something dumb, the mistruth can take on a life of its own. The lie can get passed on from generation to generation until it becomes a zombie lie that has a life of its own.
Justin, known as 90sKidforLife on TikTok and Instagram, put together a list of 10 lies that parents told their kids in the ‘90s, and the Gen X kids in the comments thought it was spot on.
“Why was I told EVERY ONE of these?” Brittany, the most popular commenter, wrote. “I heard all of these plus the classic ‘If you keep making that face, it will get stuck like that,’” Amanda added. After just four days of being posted, it has already been seen 250,000 times.
Parents were always lying #90s #90skids #parenting
There’s something special about Miller High Life. This no-frills, cheap, thirst-quenching American adjunct lager is as classic as beer gets. Best imbibed in its clear bottles adorned with the simple Miller High Life label and the iconic image of a woman sitting on the moon while hoisting a frosty brew, it’s crisp, refreshing, and highly crushable.
Fans of the beer are very loyal to the brand. But if they want to try something else in the same vein, there are tons of great lager options available. From big brands like Narragansett, Jack’s Abby, and Bell’s to Creature Comforts and SingleCut, myriad lagers are well-suited for fans of the classic, crisp, refreshing “Champagne of beers.”
Don’t worry, while we mentioned that countless lagers fit the bill, we aren’t going to make you find these diamonds in the rough. We took the liberty of picking eight of the best lagers for fans of Miller High Life and ranking them on overall crisp, refreshing flavor notes and profile. Read on to see the champ!
If this lager was good enough to be “crushed by Quint” in Jaws, it should be good enough for you. The epitome of a no-frills, crushable beer, it’s brewed with six-row malt, a mix of hops from the Pacific Northwest, Iowa corn, a proprietary lager strain, and pure water from Lake Ontario and Hemlock Lake.
Tasting Notes:
A nose of cereal grains, honey, sweet corn, caramel malt, and floral hops greets you before your first sip. Drinking it reveals a crisp, easy-drinking lager with flavors like sweet corn, cereal grains, lemon, honey, hay, and more floral hops. It’s crisp and refreshing at the finish
Bottom Line:
This is a beer for crushing on a hot day. It’s not overly exciting when it comes to aroma and palate, but that’s not the point. It’s a classic easy-drinking beer.
Bell’s used to make a crisp lager called Lager of the Lakes, but that beer was discontinued in favor of its new Lager for the Lakes. Confused? Don’t worry. So are we. This version is a crisp, clean pilsner that was created to bring awareness to the need to preserve and protect clean lakes. That being said, it’s totally crushable and thirst-quenching as well.
Tasting Notes:
You’ll find aromas of cracker-like malts, wet grass, cereal grains, honey, lemon peels, and floral, earthy hops on the nose. The palate is loaded with more cracker-like malts, honey, lemongrass, hay, cereal grains, and floral, herbal, and Noble hops. It’s crisp, clean, and straightforward to drink.
Bottom Line:
This is a very well-balanced, but still sessionable lager. It has malt sweetness up front and a nice kick of Noble hops at the finish.
The folks at Cincinnati’s Rhinegeist set out to make a classic, crisp, easy-drinking, balanced lager and did just that with Cheetah. This beer isn’t trying to be anything it isn’t. It’s a malt-forward, gently hoppy lager that you can sip all year long. If you’re a fan of Miller High Life, you’ll love this refreshing lager.
Tasting Notes:
Complex aromas of lemon peels, honey, freshly baked bread, yeast, cereal grains, and floral hops greet your nostrils before your first sip. There’s more of the same on the palate with bready, caramel malts up front followed by lemon peels, honey, and floral hops. The finish is clean, crisp, and lightly bitter.
Bottom Line:
If you’ve never tried this beer, what are you waiting for? It’s a complex, well-balanced take on the no-frills, crisp lager style.
With a name like ‘Howdy Beer’, you should assume that this is a classic, no-frills beer. This Colorado-brewed pilsner was created to taste like a beer a cowboy might want to drink after a long day roping cattle. But even if your work is behind a computer, you can enjoy this crisp, thirst-quenching malty, lightly hoppy beer.
Tasting Notes:
You’ll find notes of sweet corn, cereal grains, honey, citrus peels, and floral hops on the nose. Sipping it reveals more corn sweetness, cereal grains, hay, wet grass, caramel malt, citrus peels, honey, and floral, earthy hops. The finish is crisp, hoppy, and lightly bitter.
Bottom Line:
If you’re into beers with corn-sweet, floral-hopped, crisp, refreshing beers, this is the one for you. It’s perfect in its simplicity.
After a long day of work, there’s nothing better than a crisp, clean, refreshing lager. Anything else just isn’t acceptable. The brewers at Jack’s Abby are well aware of this. Available year-round, its Post Shift Pilsner is known for its thirst-quenching flavor and mix of cracker malts and floral, earthy hops.
Tasting Notes:
This Bavarian-style lager begins with a nose of cereal grains, wet grass, hay, lemon zest, honey, and floral, earthy hops. The palate is filled with yeasty, bready malts, nutty sweetness, wet grass, hay, lemon peel, and earthy, floral hops. The finish is dry, lightly bitter, and very crisp.
Bottom Line:
This is a surprisingly complex, balanced pilsner. That being said, it’s still crushable and refreshing and perfect for a break from your usual High Life.
Who wouldn’t want to drink a beer called Classic City Lager? This sessionable lager from Athens, Georgia’s Creature Comforts is known for its easy-drinking, no-frills flavor. Made with simple ingredients like malted barley and hops, it’s a can’t-miss for High-Life drinkers.
Tasting Notes:
The nose is all lemon zest, bready malts, honey, hay, and floral, herbal hops. It’s a great start to a classic lager. Drinking it reveals notes of cereal grains, sweet corn, lemon peels, hay, fresh-cut grass, honey, and floral hops. The finish is malty, floral, and memorable.
Bottom Line:
This is a beer for drinkers looking for a “Classic” lager. It ticks all the crisp, refreshing lager boxes.
Named for the elaborate engravings created by sailors in the 1800s, this easy-drinking pilsner was brewed with Munich malt as well as Hallertauer and Tettnang hops. The result is a German-style lager with classic clean, crisp, floral flavors.
Tasting Notes:
Breathing in the nose, you’ll find aromas of crisp apples, citrus peels, honey, cereal grains, and floral hops. The palate is similar with bready malts, cereal grains, honey sweetness, lemon peel, hay, and floral, earthy, Noble hops. The finish is dry, and crisp, and leaves you wanting more.
Bottom Line:
As German-style pilsners go, it’s tough to beat the appeal of North Coast Scrimshaw. It’s a great beer when you want a break from High Life.
This award-winning, sessional lager is known for its simple, crisp, easy-drinking flavor profile. It gets that flavor from the use of malt sourced from Europe as well as European hops. On top of that, in the true old world style, it’s unfiltered and horizontally lagered for months before it’s ready.
Tasting Notes:
Classic aromas of honey, freshly baked bread, citrus peels, and floral, spicy, earthy hops greet you before you even take your first sip. Drinking it reveals a complex flavor profile featuring notes of sweet malts, fresh bread, cereal grains, orange peels, lemon, and floral hops. The finish is dry, crisp, and lightly bitter in the best way possible.
Bottom Line:
If you only drink one beer on this list, make it SingleCut Frequency. It’s classic, crisp, and loaded with authentic German aromas and flavors.
The exclusive rights window for ESPN and TNT to work out a new deal with the NBA to remain their national broadcast partners passed recently (as expected), and the league has been shopping rights to a number of other networks and streamers.
The NBA has not been shy about their desire to look beyond the traditional cable bundle with their new rights deal, and it appears they are close to a deal that will send a significant portion of their national schedule to Amazon. According to Andrew Marchand of The Athletic, the two sides have agreed to the framework of a deal that would give Amazon both regular season and playoff games.
It is expected that Prime Video’s package will include significant regular season and postseason games, perhaps even some conference finals. The anticipation is that the final contract will be for at least a decade and begin the 2025-2026 season.
Marchand also confirmed reports that ESPN will remain on board as a main partner, but will decrease their regular season broadcast load (possibly by as many as 20 games) to make room for a third network partner. The rest of the package will likely go to either TNT (Warner Bros. Discovery) or NBC, with TNT having the right to match any deal to retain rights.
Once that last piece of the rights puzzle is agreed to, we will learn the full scale of the deal, how games in both the regular season and playoffs will be split, and how much the league will bring in annually from the new contracts.
Stranger Things has been a pop culture staple for the last five-plus years, and there is still one more season left of the supernatural drama, despite the fact that most of the cast is ready for other roles. But the fans have been waiting for years to see the conclusion, and even though there is still a bit of a wait, the final season is starting to shape up.
Despite the moderate wait (the last batch of episodes dropped in Summer 2022) the writers team want you to know that it will be worth it, and they even described season five as if “season 1 and 4 had a baby” which was “injected with steroids,” so feel free to interpret that however you’d like. Here is what we know about the highly anticipated season so far.
Plot
It will surely be hard to wrap up a show like Stranger Things, so there has got to be a ton of pressure on the Duffer Bros. Luckily, the producers seem pretty confident in their ability to wrap up the story, which began almost eight years ago when most of the cast was still under the age of 12. It hasn’t been confirmed, but many fans have speculated that there will be a significant time jump between season four and five. What we do have, though, is the opening shot of episode one, which is titled, “The Crawl.”
It could go anywhere from here! But it will likely follow the gang as they try to finish off the evil Vecna once and for all, before he causes even more supernatural destruction. Maya Hawke, who plays Robin on the Netflix series, confirmed that the episodes are bigger and better than ever. “It’s extremely exciting,” she said. “It’s always wonderful when the kind of riddle of a world that gets built, starts to get resolved and questions start to be answered. I think it was mind-bogglingly wonderful for me and I think audiences will feel that way too. It’s really an emotional thing to go into filming this last season, so I’m excited.”
Meanwhile, other cast members, like Gaten Matarazzo, are prepared for some actual bloodshed now that the stakes are higher. “It might sound messed up but we should kill more people,” Matarazzo said of the final season. “This show would be so much better if the stakes were much higher, like at any moment any of these kids can kick it. I feel like we’re all too safe.” Not for long!!
Cast
Thankfully, all of the fan-favorites (at least the alive ones) are back for the conclusion. Netflix has shared behind the scenes photos that have confirmed the return of Noah Schnapp, Millie Bobby Brown, David Harbour, Winona Ryder, Cara Buono, Joe Keery, Amybeth McNulty, Charlie Heaton, Brett Gelman, Maya Hawke, Natalia Dyer, Jamie Campbell Bower, Priah Ferguson, Linda Hamilton, Gaten Matarazzo, Caleb McLaughlin, Ross Duffer, Matt Duffer, Finn Wolfhard, and Sadie Sink. And it gets better! Terminator actress Linda Hamilton is also set to star in a secret role in the season.
Unfortunately, we don’t have an exact date. Filming began back in January, and Brown confirmed in March that they still had about nine months left, not including post-production. This means that the earliest we could see season five would be some time in spring/summer 2025, depending on if the series will be split up again.
Trailer
We have no footage from season five, but the Duffer bros have been actively posting behind-the-scenes photos on their Instagram to help build the hype. If you look at them really fast, it can almost give the effect of a real trailer!
Rising East Asian pop stars BIBI and Jackson Wang get comfortable and close in their seductive, sexy video for “Feeling Lucky.” The duet finds the duo — who both just played to an enthusiastic Coachella crowd — trading sensuous come-ons as they look to close what little distance there is between them.
In a press release, BIBI said, “I absolutely loved working on this track. The process was incredibly smooth and just so much fun—big thanks to 88(rising, the label that releases both artists’ music in the US) for making that happen. Collaborating with Jackson Wang, a true pro, felt like gliding through the song effortlessly. This single captures the exhilarating, butterfly-inducing type of love, with a playful, flirty, and irresistibly sexy Hollywood flair. I hope it steals your hearts in true cinematic style!”
Previously, the South Korean star teamed up with Latin pop sensation Becky G for the reggaeton-influenced “Amigos.” The cross-cultural connection capped a 2023 that saw her release three new singles after the release of her debut album Lowlife Princess: Noir. She kicked off her 2024 campaign with “Bam Yang Gang,” which is named after a Korean snack. It reached the top of the South Korean songs chart, marking a new height for the rising star.
You can watch the “Feeling Lucky” video at the top of the page.
Conflict between Israel and Palestine has been ongoing for many decades, with scholars around the world spending years analyzing and explaining why and how. But regardless of how we got here, the violence we saw perpetrated on Israelis on October 7th and the violence we’ve seen perpetrated on Palestinians in the months since has been a drastic escalation with unspeakably tragic results.
People of goodwill everywhere search for hope in times such as these, for evidence that humanity hasn’t been completely destroyed by vengeance and violence, that real peace is in fact possible. And there is no better pair to offer glimmers of such hope than Palestinian peacemaker Aziz Abu Sarah and Israeli peacemaker Maoz Inon, who sat down face-to-face on a TED stage in April of 2024 to share their personal stories and talk about what peace requires.
Unlike those of us watching war unfold from half a world away through the lens of media spin and social media algorithms, these men have lived this conflict up close. Sarah’s brother was killed by the Israeli Defense Forces when he was just 19 years old. Inon’s parents were killed by Hamas on the October 7th, 2023 attack. They both have every reason to be angry—and they are—but the way they purposefully process their anger into peacebuilding is an example to us all.
Inon begins their conversation by sharing how his parents and childhood friends were killed on October 7th, then shares how grateful he was that Sarah was one of the first people to reach out to him even though they’d only met once before. Sarah shares how his brother was killed by the IDF and how all of his friends have lost family members to Israel’s bombardment of Gaza, yet praises how he Inon has processed his loss.
“When I sent you that message to offer my condolences after your parents were killed, I was surprised by your answer,” Sarah told Inon. “Not just to me, but your public answer. Because you said you’re not only crying for your parents, you’re also crying for the people in Gaza who are losing their lives, and that you do not want what happened to you to be justifying anyone taking revenge. You do not want to justify war.”
“And it’s so hard to do that,” he added. “So much easier to want revenge, to be angry. But you are a brave man.”
Sarah said it took him “much more time” to reach such a place after his brother was killed. “I was angry, I was bitter, and I wanted vengeance. I was 10 years old and I thought there is no other choice. And only eight years later, when I went to study Hebrew with Jewish immigrants to Israel, that’s only when I realized that we can be allies.”
Both men have been peace activists for years. What’s particularly beautiful about their conversation is that they are talking directly to each other, not to the audience, offering an example of what sitting down with the “other side” can look like when you share the goal of peace. They tell their personal stories and explain what has driven them to seek reconciliation over revenge. They listen to and learn from one another. They acknowledge the difficulty but are unwavering in their dedication to build peace.
The division stemming from the historical reality and current politics of Israel and Palestine may feel intractable, but if these men who have lost so much can find common ground and a shared vision, then hope remains. Their dialogue is moving people to tears and is well worth a watch:
When Steve Burns hosted “Blue’s Clues,” where he solved household mysteries with an animated puppy on Nick Jr. from 1996 to 2002, he was one of the world’s most recognizable faces on children’s TV. That level of notoriety comes with some perks and in 2000, a Playboy model sent him a glossy photo with a note asking him to invite her to dinner.
After some prodding from the animation staff, Burns took the model up on the offer. The date would become an experience he would never forget. It was filled with an incredible amount of awkwardness, crazy twists and balloon animals.
Burns shared the story in September 2010 at New York’s Players Club as part of a monologue titled “Fameishness” as part of “The Moth” storytelling forum.
The date started on the wrong foot when the model demanded to be picked up by a limo and Burns said he’d stop by her house in his Volkswagon. Things went downhill from there. Her first words to Burms were: “I thought you’d be taller.”
Then, Burns saw a kid’s “Blues Clues” themed birthday party on their way to dinner and things really took a twist.
The Moth Presents Steve Burns: Fameishness
Since leaving “Blue’s Clues” in 2002, Burns has worked as a musician, writing and performing the theme song for “Young Sheldon.” He has also done extensive voice work for big brands, including Snickers, Snapple, Lowes and McDonald’s. Recently, he returned to the Blue’s Clues team, directing several episodes of “Blue’s Clues & You!” and starring in the film “Blue’s Big City Adventure.”
Many times biases are an unconscious thing which can be partially formed due to media and algorithm exposure. Since people are the ones in charge of creating media and algorithm codes, their own biases creep in unintentionally. Carmen Mejia recently posted a video exposing a pretty blatant bias on Google.
The content creator shared a skit to Instagram where she switches between playing the role of the mom, son and daughter. In the beginning of the skit, the boy goes to his mom and asks what it means to be “manly.” Mejia asks Google and is immediately met with an encouraging list of synonyms to describe what it means to be manly.
Words like brave, strong, and adventurous came up right away, but the same wasn’t true when she asked Google to describe “womanly.” This time the search engine returned a list of words that described physical attributes like, curvaceous, voluptuous, busty and thick. It was painfully obvious that gender based bias had made its way into the search engine’s algorithm and women in the comments were having none of that.
People began leaving comments on Mejia’s video revealing that after her video they went to Google to report the list. When reporting content to the search engine, they give you an option to include a feedback note, which is where the frustrated women vented their concerns.
“I reported the words and sent a comment, i know it’s not much but if we all do this, maybe it’ll change,” one person writes.
“I just googled it. There is not one physical characteristic described under the ‘manly’ synonyms, while there is not one NON-physical characteristic under the ‘womanly’ synonyms. This is really sad,” another wrote.
Mejia tells Upworthy how the idea came about, “I actually saw a screenshot of the two lists floating around the internet and figured more people need to see it. I created this video to spread awareness around the topic and to hopefully inspire change. As well as build a sense of community amongst women who face the same challenges everyday, it’s not a favorable situation…but it’s always nice to know that you’re not alone.”
Inspiring change is not only what it did, the video actually created change thanks to all the reporting women did. It was something that was completely unexpected by Mejia.
In the comments of her post, Mejia updated her followers just days later revealing that Google took it all down. According to another commenters, the synonyms for manly still shows up but the ones for womanly are completely gone. This change is only effective on Google, Oxford and other thesaurus cites probably have a much longer process to review and remove problematic content. No worries though, the ladies in the comments are still tagging and writing the dictionary and thesaurus powers that be to get an updated list not focused on women’s bodies.
Meijia explains, “Although my intention was to inspire change, i did not expect it to receive the amount of petitioning it did. So many women were tagging Google and Oxford and mentioning how they left feedback straight away.It was such a powerful thing to see.”
Whether it’s a traffic stop that turns into “We smell something in your car” or a “driving while black” situation, you have rights when you’re pulled over, and it’s for the best if you actually use them.
So how does this work, anyway?
Well, you have rights when you’re pulled over. These have been established via case law, and ultimately, some stem from the Constitution itself. In order, here are the magic phrases, along with some graphics to help you remember.
1. “Am I free to go?”
In any situation involving the police, you can ask this question. Some people ask it slightly differently: “Am I being detained?”—which is a version of the same question. Basically, if they’ve got nothing on you, they have to let you go. If they answer no to that question, you are in fact not free to go. In that case, you are suspected of doing something, and it’s their job to try to get you to admit to it or to say a bit too much and incriminate yourself.
2. “I do not consent to any searches.”
One of the trickiest things that some law enforcement folks try is to talk you into letting them search your vehicle—or house, for that matter. “So if you haven’t done anything, then you’re ok with us searching your car … right? I mean, if you’re innocent. We’ll go easier on you if you let us.” Do NOT give up your rights that easily. Are you certain your buddy didn’t leave a bag of weed in the glove box? Are you sure your boyfriend took his target pistol out of the trunk after he went to practice shooting the other day? Are you absolutely certain that the body in your trunk was removed and buried in that farm fiel … whoops. Did I say that last one out loud?! The point is, don’t give up your rights easily. And believe me, cops are gooooood at trying to play psychological games. Which leads to #3.
3. “I want to remain silent.”
You have that right, and if things start getting thick, you need to use it. “We clocked you going 60 in a 50, but when you opened your window to give us your license, we smelled marijuana.” The correct answer to something like this is, “I want to remain silent.” The temptation is to say, “Yeah, my buddy and I smoked in my car this morning but I wasn’t driving, blah blah blah”—but then you’re already nailed. Time for them to get the dogs and search. Congratulations, you’re on your way to the pokey for the night.
4. “I want a lawyer.”
If you’ve reach this particular point, then you’re in deep doodoo anyway, so go ahead and ask for one, and say nothing until he or she arrives. Remember these four things. It will be hard in the moment, with your adrenaline pumping, your freedom in question, and when you’re possibly in physical danger, depending on the cops involved and your skin color.
“Am I free to go?”
“I do not consent to any searches.”
“I want to remain silent.”
“I want a lawyer.”
Perhaps a word involving the first letter of the four statements will help you remember: FoSSiL (Free, Searches, Silent, Lawyer)
Or maybe a mnemonic:
— Fiscal Suns Scramble Lives
— Fresh Sushi Smell Lemons
— Flexible Straws Sell Lobsters
— Free Subjects Steam Lobsters
The clip below is a shortened version of a much longer one that explains your rights, detailing what you can and cannot do in these situations.
This article was written by Brandon Weber and originally appeared on 09.12.17
In 2013, I found out I was pregnant with triplets.
Image via iStock.
My husband and I were in shock but thrilled at the news after dealing with infertility for years. And it didn’t take long for the comments to begin. When people found out, the usual remarks followed: “Triplets?! What are you going to do? Three kids at once?! Glad it’s not me!”
After mastering my response (and an evil look reserved for the rudest comments), I figured that was the worst of it. But little did I know I would be facing far worse comments after two of my triplets passed away.
On June 23, 2013, I gave birth to my triplets, more than four months premature.
My daughter, Abigail, passed away that same day; my son, Parker, died just shy of 2 months old. Before then, I didn’t know much about child loss; it was uncharted territory. Like most people, I wouldn’t know how to respond or what to say if a friend’s child passed away.
Image via iStock.
But two years later, I have found that some things are better left unsaid. These comments come from a good place, and I know people mean well, but they sure do sting.
Here are my top five things not to say to a grieving parent — and the thing I love to hear instead.
1. “Everything happens for a reason.”
It’s a cringeworthy comment for those of us who have lost a child. Sometimes, there is no rhyme or reason for why things happen in life. A parent should not outlive their child. I don’t know why my body couldn’t handle my pregnancy or why I went into labor at 22 weeks.
This phrase goes along with another I often hear: “God only gives us what we can handle.” I remember talking with my childhood rabbi the night before my son passed away, and I asked her, “Why me?” Her response is something I now live by every single day. She said, “God doesn’t give us only what we can handle. He helps us handle what we’ve been given.”
2. “They are in a better place.”
Instead of comforting, this is a phrase that makes me feel down in the dumps. I longed to be a parent for so many years. And children are meant to be in the loving arms of their parents.
I think I speak for every grieving mother and father when I say, we would give anything to hold our babies again.
3. “At least you have one survivor. Count your blessings.”
I like to think of myself as a positive person. But even two years later, my heart still aches for Parker and Abby. And on the most difficult, dark days of grief, it’s hard to “count my blessings.”
Yes, I am blessed. I have a gorgeous miracle child who is the light of my life. But Peyton should be playing with her brother and sister in our home, not just waving to their pictures and blowing kisses to heaven.
4. “You are still young. You can have more children.”
It doesn’t matter whether or not our biological clock is ticking. Many people have no idea what couples go through to have a child: Some can’t have children of their own; others may face years of infertility or miscarriages. And for people like me, trying for more children may be something too scary to even think about. I came close to death after delivering my children — that’s enough to scar me for life.
5. “I don’t know how you do it. I couldn’t imagine losing two children.”
Some days I don’t know how I do it either. But we learn how to live with it. We learn a “new normal,” and in those tough moments, we celebrate that we survived the day. This comment is a difficult reminder of our grief and the children who were sent to heaven.
So, what should you say to a grieving parent?
There are no words to take the pain away, of course, but simply letting that person know you are there for them is more than enough.
For me, the best thing someone can do is to talk about my angels. Say Parker and Abby by name, and don’t be afraid to ask questions about them.
While they were only here for a short time, they left a huge imprint on this world. I love talking about my angels, and simply hearing someone else mention them by name is enough to wipe away the grief and warm my heart for days.
This article was written by Stacey Skrysak and originally appeared on 7.15.16
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