I probably should have written this when “Booty, booty, booty, booty rockin' everywhere…” was well… everywhere.
In the early 1960s, Schachter and Singer came up with the two factor theory of emotion, which suggests that we (
need two ingredients in a cauldron full of hot strong love )
However, I don't know if people who write lyrics like that are completely in tune with the world of psychology. It's possible though, I suppose.
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One day, my friend RJ and I were listening to Fergie's "London Bridge". And RJ wondered what “London Bridge” was a metaphor for, in “How come every time you come around / My London, London Bridge wanna go down.”This is a question for the ages ( ... )
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You can know what works without knowing why something works
Touche.
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After re-reading my response, I feel like I should MST myself. I use big wordses!
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MST?
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MST = Mystery Science Theatre.
Inserting text that points out grammatical errors... mischaracterizations... anything worth lampooning.
It's done a lot to fanfic.
...could be similarly capitalizing on a phenomenon without understanding it.
I just don't like saying things in a more complicated way (except in papers) than it requires. Just felt like a hypocrite there.
Oh, this is really tangential, but have you ever seen that apple commercial that ran a few mos back? Hilarious!
And there's Think Different, originally created by Henry Wagner, who has also taken a picture of the greatest street sign ever on his U2 pilgrimage
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I see. Well, I don't mind when people use large words, since it improves my vocabulary, but I as far as structure goes, I agree -- keep it simple.
I didn't see that one (though I've seen others like it). DOOD, I totally used "touche" correctly! ... I think ....
I love that commercial. I can't remember where I've seen it before, but I know I have. It gives me warm fuzzies.
That street sign is all kinds of awesome too.
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Mmmmm... MSTing - more parodying & less proofreading. deleterius is a good example of some vicious stuff.
Not entirely sure, but I think beta isn't an acronym. Just indicates the second. Alpha (writer) -> beta (proofreader) -> public consumption
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Thanks for clearing that up for me.
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