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Rod Beck's Bolero
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I assumed that Comic Sans was an intentional choice, reflecting Dan Gilbert's deranged Comic Sans tirade on the Cavaliers' website. If so, that's an inspired bit of trolling.

I played around with some different online BAC calculators and determined that a 255 lb male would have to consume 22-24 beers (5% alcohol) over the course of three hours to achieve a BAC of .377.

My favorite rocker who is way older than you would ever guess is Andy Summers of The Police, who is, I shit you not, SEVENTY-ONE. He's older than Eric Clapton, Jeff Beck, Jimmy Page, even George Harrison. He was 41 when The Police broke up ... 30 years ago.

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He is the father of Vi Hart, who is herself a minor internet celebrity for her even trippier math-oriented videos (and for her Lisa-Loeb's-little-sister geeky appeal.)

I think the author meant it was "disappointing" to know that the ball only went 410' given that, to hit the ball completely out of most other ballparks, it has to travel a lot farther than that. Fenway park is so lopsided that "in the parking lot across the street" in left is the same distance as the third or fourth

410' looks about right according to Google Earth. But just for fun, I drew in a 410' homer to RIGHT field, which just clears the bullpen by a few rows. Why would anyone pay a non-zero number of dollars to sit in those last few rows of the RF bleachers at Fenway - they're farther from the plate than the Coors Rockpile.

"Dong" reached peak popularity in 1956 and was used widely until the late '70s - guessing that the Vietnam War (Vietnamese currency is the dong and the North Vietnamese Premier was Pham Van Dong) plus the Chinese Dongfeng Missile and Mao Zedong, etc. all contributed to Peak Dong.

Kirk Goldsberry to the rescue! It looks like 29' is about the point where shooters average 27% (i.e. 0.81 pts per attempt) with the three-point shot, which means 1.08 pts per attempt if they counted for four apiece. Of course the court is only 50' wide so a 29' four-point arc would intersect the sideline. Presumably

Battery life, reliable transmission, etc. would definitely be major issues. Just saying that weight would be a lesser issue because the bikes have now reached the point where you actually have to ADD weight to get them up to the bureaucratically stipulated minimum weight. The video equipment could effectively be

The weight of the video equipment is an issue but only to a certain extent. Per the UCI rules each bike must weigh a minimum of 6.8 kg (15 lb) and if you picked the lightest available frame, wheelset, drivetrain, cockpit, etc. you'd come in 2-3 lbs under that. So the riders have to carry a little extra weight, and

Jerk tutor I met reeked

It's actually 1169 years, not 1170, because there was no year 0.

BTW, there have been 9 no hitters in MLB history with 14+ strikeouts, and Ryan has four of the nine. Kershaw, Don Wilson, Spahn, and the Cain and Koufax perfectos are the others.

Strikeouts and walks in Ryan no-hitters:

I actually refer to my immersion blender as "the hummus maker" because that's all I ever use it for - I just make the hummus right in the chickpea can. Drain about 2/3 of the liquid, add your oil, sesame, spices, whatever, plunge the hummus maker right into the can, and you have hummus in a can.

NFL kickers were .948 on PATs in 1942 and .927 in 1943, so that lends further credence to your "replacement player" theory. But something else must have happened too.

The NFL was 16/62 (.258) on FG attempts in 1943 after going 33/81 (.407) the year before. Kickers who didn't attempt a FG the year before were 7/26 (.269) and veteran kickers were just as bad at 9/36 (.250.) So replacement talent is part of the story but there must have been something else that happened. In fact, I

Can this be right - kickers made ~25% of their field goals one season ca. 1943? What did they do, make the ball out of feathers that year to save leather for the war effort? Why would you even bother attempting a 1/4 shot at 3 points?