Plastic is in everything, from the clothes we wear to the water we drink. John Oliver explains how plastics are harming the planet, why recycling isn’t the solution you think it is, and why fixing the problem will be up to not just consumers, but corporations and policymakers.
In 2019, ek hornbeck wrote: “Ok, I’ll bite. WHAT THE HECK ARE YOU THINKING GIVING NOTRE DAME AT 30 – 3 A #1 SEED AND SNOOTING UCONN AT 31 – 2?! Bless your hearts (which you’ll recall refers to someone with an Oedipal Conflict in Dixie)!”
This year Notre Dame is not playing, neither the women or the men and Muffet McGraw has retired.
Welcome to The Breakfast Club! We’re a disorganized group of rebel lefties who hang out and chat if and when we’re not too hungoverwe’ve been bailed outwe’re not too exhausted from last night’s (CENSORED) the caffeine kicks in. Join us every weekday morning at 9am (ET) and weekend morning at 10:00am (ET) (or whenever we get around to it) to talk about current news and our boring lives and to make fun of LaEscapee! If we are ever running late, it’s PhilJD’s fault.
This Day in History
Britain enacts the Stamp Act on its American colonies; The ‘Garbage Barge’; Skater Tara Lipinski reaches the record books; The Beatles release ‘Please Please Me’; Composer Andrew Lloyd Webber born.
Breakfast Tunes
Something to Think about over Coffee Prozac
Sarcasm all around the world is always against right wing and against people in power. That’s the definition of political sarcasm.
In 2019, ek hornbeck wrote: “If you’re reading this it’s because I’m still napping. It is the debut of the Lady Huskies in this year’s Tournament and I’d look up the fight song but I’m also lazy.”
He found it later after a nap.
Yup, this is mind bending. Fortunately, ek left me the map, so I don’t have to figure it out. Have I told you how much I hate HTML?
Last year ek hornbeck created a “New and Improved with Special (and a subtly different pain in the ass) Table for Results. So this is the one I’ll be using today and for future games. The winners will be bolded and the upset winners will be on the right, the lower seeds are always on the right.
There were some interesting upsets last night:
First, the #7 UConn men failed to advance over #10 Maryland. The next to go was #4 Virginia falling to #13 Ohio. Then #6 Brigham Young (BYU) was toppled by #11 UCLA, Play In winner. I think the biggest stunner of the night was the last game of the night with #3 Texas losing by one point to #14 Abilene Christian.
These are scores for the teams that played yesterday. They will advance to the next round.
Seed
School
Record
Score
Seed
School
Record
Score
Region
12
Georgetown
13 -12
73
5
Colorado
22 – 8
96
East
13
UNCG
21 – 8
54
4
Florida St.
13 – 6
64
East
14
E. Washington
16 – 7
84
3
Kansas
20 – 8
93
West
9
St. Bonaventure
16 – 4
61
8
LSU
19 – 9
76
East
16
TX Southern
16 – 8
66
1
Michigan
20 – 4
82
East
15
Iona
12 – 5
55
2
Alabama
24 – 6
68
East
11
Drake
25 – 4
56
6
USC
22 – 7
72
West
15
Grand Canyon
17 – 6
74
2
Iowa
21 – 8
86
West
10
Maryland*
16 – 13
63
7
UConn
16 – 7
54
East
13
Ohio*
16 – 7
62
4
Virginia
18 – 6
56
West
9
Missouri
16 – 9
68
8
Oklahoma
15 – 10
72
West
16
Norfolk St
16-7
55
1
Gonzaga
26 – 0
98
West
11
UCLA*
17 – 9
73
6
BYU
20 – 6
62
East
14
Abilene Christian*
23 – 4
53
3
Texas
19 – 7
52
East
10
VCU
19 – 7
7
Oregon**
20 – 6
West
12
USC -SB
22 – 4
62
5
Creighton
20 – 8
63
West
* indicates an upset.
**VCU knocked out by positive CoVid-19 tests. Oregon automatically advances
He also decided to break the games into Early and Late sessions. “CBS of course wants you to plant your butt in front of the screen all day, but the truth is that the Early stuff is all CBS all the time so you could watch every single game from beginning to end if sheer volume is your goal.
I’m dividing it because of the tendency of items to slide out of consciousness off the bottom, especially on busy days (Did something happen? I wasn’t paying attention. March Madness!). Thus the Prime Time games will be posted closer to Prime Time.”
I assure you I have something incredibly trenchant and profound to say about the state of Women’s Basketball, but I’m already at least 40 hours into this project out of the last 72 or so and I’m afraid my brain is totally fried.
Fortunately most of the heavy lifting is done.
Do I have favorites? Sure. Michigan out of sentiment, Robert Morris because the sooner Louisville goes out the better it is for Connecticut who has to face them for the East Regional Championship. They already beat UConn once.
Dr. Martlin Luther King, Jr. begins march from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama; the Sharkville massacre in South Africa occurs; Wrongly incarcerated Randall Dale Adams is released from prison; Musician Johann Bach born.
Something to think about, Breakfast News & Blogs below
The real vaccine conspiracy is the fact that the Bayh-Dole Act allows the federal gov to set the price & distribution of publicly financed medicine but has never exercised that right, not on HIV/AIDS meds, covid vaccines or anything, ever. PhRMA always pushes back and wins.
Pondering the Pundits: Sunday Preview Edition” is an Open Thread. It is a selection of editorials and opinions from around the news medium and the internet blogs. The intent is to provide a forum for your reactions and opinions, not just to the opinions presented, but to what ever you find important.
On Sunday mornings we present a preview of the guests on the morning talk shows so you can choose which ones to watch or some do something more worth your time on a Sunday morning.
This Week with George Stephanopolis: The guests on Sunday’s “This Week” are: Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas; Rep. Michael McCaul (R-TX); and Rep. Judy Chu (D-CA).
The roundtable guests are: Jonathan Karl, ABC News Chief Washington correspondent; Matt Gutman, ABC News Chief National correspondent; and Laura Barrón-López, White House Correspondent for POLITICO.
Face the Nation: Host Margaret Brennan’s guests are: Sen. Tammy Duckworth (D-IL); Sen. Rob Portman (R-OH); Democratic Los Angelis Mayor Eric Garcetti; Dr. Moncel Slaoui, former chief advisor for Operation Warp Speed; and former FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb MD.
Meet the Press with Chuck Todd: The guests on this week’s “MTP” are: Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas; Sen. Raphael Warnock (D-GA); and Sen. Roy Blunt (R-MO).
The panel guests are: Julia Ainsley, NBC News correspondent; Prof. Eddie Glaude Jr., Princeton University; Peggy “Our Lady of the magic Dolphins” Noonan, Wall Street Journal columnist; and Jon Ralston, political commentator.
State of the Union with Jake Tapper and Dana Bash: Mr. Tapper’s guests are: Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas; Sen. Dick Durbin (D-IL); Rep. Kim Young (R-CA); and Rep. Michael Steele (R-WA)
The UConn men are up tonight along with my very favorite team, Gonzaga. Yes, I know I’m an East coast gal who graduated from some highly rated East coast universities, NYU being one of them, and Gonzaga is a Jesuit run institution named after Jesuit saint Aloysius Gonzaga and I’m not Catholic, not even close. When I lived in Washington DC area years ago , I met a man in a piano bar who as tinkering at the baby grand. I joined him tinkering and we became friends, often having dinner together. He was a graduate of Gonzaga and a law professor at Georgetown, also a Jesuit priest. He was a bit older than I was but we remained pals until he passed away years ago. The other reasons I root for Gonzaga, besides the team coming such a long way to being unbeaten and #1, it’s a great name to shout – GONZAGA!!! I am sure my Jesuit friend, where ever he is, is cheering for them, too.
Here are the winner from last evenings games:
#13 Liberty 60 – #4 Oklahoma St. 69
#9 Wisconsin 85 – #8 n. Carolina 62
#15 Cleveland St. 56 – #2 Houston 87
#13 North Texas 78 – #4 Perdue 69
#10 Rutgers 60 – #7 Clemson 56
#11 Syracuse 78 – #6 San Diego St. 62 (This win made my night)
While you were sleeping the sun slipped over the equator and it became Spring at 5:37 AM EDT, astronomically speaking. Huh? There’s a difference somewhere? Yup.
According to the good old Farmer’s Almanac, it’s been Spring since March 1, meteorologically speaking.
Q: Does Spring Begin on March 1 or on the Equinox?
A: Well, both. The answer depends on your definition of “spring.” Both dates are accurate; they’re just from different perspectives. We’ll explain …
Astronomically speaking, the first day of spring is marked by the spring equinox, which falls on March 19, 20, or 21 every year. The equinox happens at the same moment worldwide, though our clock times reflect a different time zone. And, as mentioned above, this date only signals spring’s beginning in the Northern Hemisphere; it announces fall’s arrival in the Southern Hemisphere.
Interestingly, due to time zone differences, there isn’t a March 21 equinox in mainland U.S. during the entire 21st century! We won’t see a March 21 equinox again until 2101.
Meteorologically speaking, the official first day of spring is March 1 (and the last is May 31). Weather scientists divide the year into quarters to make it easier to compare seasonal and monthly statistics from one year to the next. The meteorological seasons are based on annual temperature cycles rather than on the position of Earth in relation to the Sun, and they more closely follow the Gregorian calendar. Using the dates of the astronomical equinoxes and solstices for the seasons would present a statistical problem, as these dates can vary slightly each year.
The word equinox is derived from two Latin words—aequus (equal) and nox (night).
The equinox is famously the time of balance, with theoretically 12 hours of sunshine and 12 hours of non-Sun.
In practice, it’s not exactly equal. There’s actually more day than night on the day of an equinox. Why? Earth’s atmosphere bends (refracts) sunlight upward. Also, the Sun isn’t a single point of light but a large disk. Together, these factors add more daylight to the equinox. The real date of sunlight equality is three or four days ahead of the equinox.
And you can stand a raw egg any time of the year, you just need a steady hand.
Q: According to folklore, you can stand a raw egg on its end on the equinox. Is this true?
A: This egg folklore became popular in 1945 following a LIFE article about the spring adage. “The origins of this myth are attributed to stories that the ancient Chinese would create displays of eggs standing on end during the first day of spring,” John Millis, assistant professor of physics and astronomy at Anderson University. “The ancient Chinese celebrated the first day of spring about six weeks earlier than the equinox” so it’s not just on the equinox itself.
As with most folklore, it’s only partly true. It should be balance an egg on its end but also it’s possible to balance an egg on other days, too.
I once stood an egg on the dining room table and left it there. One of my cats, Mom Cat, sat staring at it for quite some time. After several minutes, she very gently reached out with one paw and tapped it. It rolled off the table and smashed on the floor before I could reach it. As I cleaned up the mess, Mom Cat sat on the edge of the table watching, as if to say, “yes, gravity still works.”
During the winter and summer solstices, crowds flock to Stonehenge in the United Kingdom. During the solstices, the sun either rises or sets in line with the layout of the 5,000-year-old-monument. And while some visit Stonehenge for the spring equinox too, the real place to be is in Mexico.
That’s because on the equinox, the pyramid at Chichen Itza on the Yucatan Peninsula puts on a wondrous show. Built by the Mayans around 1,000 years ago, the pyramid is designed to cast a shadow on the equinox outlining the body of Kukulkan, a feathered snake god. A serpent-head statue is located at the bottom of the pyramid, and as the sun sets on the day of the equinox, the sunlight and shadow show the body of the serpent joining with the head.
If only winter would end like this:
So break out the new brooms, rakes, shovels; check out the local garden center for bedding plants and start unearthing last years Spring and Summer clothes; it’s Spring. Unless, it’s still snowing and frozen where you are.