Ethan Hawke explains why you can't see how good your own era is until it's already gone
"My kids and stuff, some of my kids are older, so 27 23 and they're like"
"Oh back in the 90s, my son showed me the other day like 5 movies that came out some weekend in 1994 something and they're all amazing"
"He said what a time I wish i lived in that time and I was like wow I remember being nonplussed that weekend
and I remember wishing it was 1974"
"So we're in this ongoing thing which make it really easy to be critical and negative about what's happening"
"Cause usually time is the great curator, time will reveal what's good about what's happening right today cause it's harder for us to see it"
YOU’RE BORED BECAUSE YOU’RE NOT DOING SIDE QUESTS, MAN.
LIFE IS MORE THAN JUST WORKING AND THEN THROWING YOURSELF INTO BED DOING NOTHING.
HERE ARE 50 SIDE QUESTS TO COMPLETE:
JD Vance: "I think Nixon's historical legacy is enjoying a bit of a renaissance, and deservedly so. I joked that if Watergate happened tomorrow, it would be like a 12 hours news story. The idea that it took down a presidency is crazy."
I am a Professor of Architecture. I have been a judge for Commonwealth Association of Architects Awards, International Union of Architects Awards, Asia Architecture Awards, AAK-Crown Architecture Awards, etc. Feel free to ignore my opinion. The New State House is plain MEDIOCRE!
There was a time when Safaricom would send everyone birthday wishes and even that 1GB birthday gift.
A time when calling 100 meant getting help almost immediately.
A time when data bundles actually felt worth it.
Now birthdays pass like any other day for many.
You can call 100 the whole day, and no one picks up.
Maybe they seem like small things, but those little customer-first touches are part of what made Bob Collymore’s era stand out.
Ndegwa, please restore customer care now.
Instead of watching an hour of Netflix, watch this 1 hour Yale lecture. It will teach you more about options trading and the exact models hedge funds use than most people learn in their entire careers on Wall Street.