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  • Vinyl Albums to 8-Track to Cassette to Compact Disc to MP3 to Vinyl

    Entertainment 08.02.2020 No Comments

  • The 20 Best-Selling Music Artists Of All Time

    Entertainment, Good Reads, On my mind, Technology 08.02.2020 No Comments

    In a streaming-dominated world, here’s some perspective. The RIAA‘s tally of the best-selling artists by U.S. album sales and streaming figures, The Beatles lead the second-place artist, country singer Garth Brooks, by over 30 million album units.

  • El Mariachi Bar in Progreso, Mexico

    Entertainment, Food, My world 07.02.2020 No Comments

  • “Michigan Winter” Paint Color Collection

    Entertainment, My world, The way I see it 01.02.2020 No Comments

  • Are you an overtipper or an undertipper? How much to really tip in bars, restaurants and taxis

    Entertainment, Food, Good Reads 28.01.2020 No Comments

    We help you decode the right percentage to tip, how much to really give your bartender and other unspoken rules.

    Dale Smith mugshot
    Dale Smith

    January 25, 2020 5:00 AM PST
    dollars-money-bills-currency-2
    It’s hard to know exactly how much to tip. Let us be your guide.

    Angela Lang/CNET

    Love it or hate it, tipping is a big part of American culture, and if you’re doing it wrong you could be embarrassing yourself — or worse — insulting the person you’re trying to acknowledge. The reality is that US employers are only required to pay employees $2.13 per hour as long as tips bring their average wage up to the federal minimum of $7.25, which means that gratuity makes up a major part of many employees’ income, especially in the service industry. But figuring out what’s a good tip versus a bad tip, or whether it’s appropriate to even tip at all, isn’t always obvious.

    Like, how much should you really tip at the bar? Is it OK to leave a low tip for terrible service? What about valets — are you really expected to slip them a fiver every time they go get your car (and are you the scum of the Earth if you don’t)?

    Not to mention that tipping practices vary depending on country or region, so it can get even more confusing if you’re traveling abroad. The best rule of thumb is to factor in tips to the full price of your meal, drink or hotel stay when you’re planning your budget. With that in mind, here’s a look at tipping standards in the United States, including how much, when and to whom you should offer gratuity — according to US News & World Report, WhoToTip.net and ArtOfManliness.com.

    To continue reading this story, please click (HERE):
  • What A World War I Hero Looks Like, According to ‘1917’

    Entertainment, Good Reads, On my mind, The way I see it, WSJ articles I like 26.01.2020 No Comments

    Director Sam Mendes’s film uses an edgy cinematic technique to follow a pair of soldiers through the horrors of the Great War


    George MacKay, center, as Schofield in ‘1917,’ directed by Sam Mendes.
     UNIVERSAL PICTURES

    By John Jurgensen

    Dec. 22, 2019 9:00 am ET

     

    George MacKay is a veteran of war on screen. The 27-year-old actor has played a soldier or veteran seven times in movies and television over the years, including World War II and Afghanistan fighters. Now he has his third role set in World War I, but the biggest of his career so far. As a stoic English infantryman saddled with an impossible mission, he helps carry the new movie “1917,” a Golden Globes nominee opening on Christmas.

    “Maybe it’s that sort of juxtaposition,” says Mr. MacKay, a Brit with soft eyes and a sharp chin, reflecting on why so many filmmakers have seen a soldier in him. “Being the baby-faced fella in that awful landscape, or being a gentle man doing violent things.”

    His “1917” co-star Dean-Charles Chapman, fresh from his role as an ineffectual prince in Netflix’s recent Shakespeare adaptation “The King,” is 22 years old and best known for playing a doomed boy-king in “Game of Thrones.” Together the actors are the sole focus of “1917,” which was filmed and edited to play as a single, uninterrupted camera shot. It follows a pair of foot soldiers sent to prevent 1,600 of their distant comrades—including the brother of Mr. Chapman’s character—from charging into a German ambush.

    “1917” was directed by Sam Mendes, who drew inspiration from his grandfather, a messenger on the Western Front when he was a teen. With Krysty Wilson-Cairns, Mr. Mendes also wrote the film, which features cinematography by Roger Deakins. The movie, by attaching itself completely to the two lance corporals as they hurtle through crowded trenches, across a hellish no-man’s-land, and into enemy territory beyond, has a scale that shifts between intimate and epic.

    To continue reading this story, please click (HERE) to go to the Wall Street Journal

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