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Random Thoughts...or...What's on Your Mind?

And people are still allowed to listen to albums by Bill Cosby, Michael Jackson, etc.
Fat Albert will still be one of my favourite cartoons despite Cosby
Back in the 1960s and '70s, Cosby was one of the funniest standup comics in the business. Some of his routines have become classics. That's the Bill Cosby I'll always remember. The creepy old perv who hung around the Playboy Mansion and drugged and raped women -- to me, that's almost a different person.

So these things are basically hanger hangers.
 
Cosby also assaulted people like makeup artists. I recall one of them saying he had his hand up her skirt while she was doing his makeup and fingering her
 
They still had one relatively near us until around 2004.

A couple may have sprung up closer since, but sold as being "retro"
The two possibilities now are Game Works and Dave and Busters. There is also Main Entertainment. All of these are not the same as a mall arcade like in the 80s and early 90s.
 
The two possibilities now are Game Works and Dave and Busters. There is also Main Entertainment. All of these are not the same as a mall arcade like in the 80s and early 90s.

The one I knew about was based in a shopping mall. I think the seaside ones swiched over to the gambling machines by then

The local one I have heard of is now based in an old mill -and currently has the equivalent of a 22 dollar entrance fee - though the machines are set up to be free now.

Apparently has 300 odd machines in there dating from the 70s to the 90s. - However, they also have some more recent consoles/gaming too. I'd probably more interested in the arcades as the PC/console stuff, we'd just do at home.
 
The one I knew about was based in a shopping mall. I think the seaside ones swiched over to the gambling machines by then

The local one I have heard of is now based in an old mill -and currently has the equivalent of a 22 dollar entrance fee - though the machines are set up to be free now.

Apparently has 300 odd machines in there dating from the 70s to the 90s. - However, they also have some more recent consoles/gaming too. I'd probably more interested in the arcades as the PC/console stuff, we'd just do at home.
I miss the social aspect.
 
Anyone use Brave? It used to prevent YouTube ads from playing but today that is completely out the window. I wonder what happened.
 
Anyone use Brave? It used to prevent YouTube ads from playing but today that is completely out the window. I wonder what happened.

I think youtube is slowly working its way around things like Brave and ad blockers. I tried Brave for a month and while it was much faster then Firefox it just didn't have all the things that I am more familiar with so I went back to what I like.
 
Sometimes I just wonder what thinking in our primitive ancestors led to the practice of using friction to make fire. I mean percussive techniques (Flint striking etc...) seems pretty self-explanatory. They'd already been chipping away at all kinds of stones for tools, & some stones made a spark, when struck, & that spark is the business.

But the notion that wood on wood, rubbing vigorously, could lead to heat, and that heat could cause small, lit embers to form? Where does that line of logic originate from? Sure, they'd been woodworking in all manners, but in what manner was wood on wood friction a part of that experience? How to you get to that conclusion? From their perspective, that's some genius level shit.
 
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There's a lot of stuff like that, that've I've wondered how it actually happened the very first time. There's so much stuff we do now that seems kind of weird when you really think about.
 
Sometimes I just wonder what thinking in our primitive ancestors led to the practice of using friction to make fire. I mean percussive techniques (Flint striking etc...) seems pretty self-explanatory. They'd already been chipping away at all kinds of stones for tools, & some stones made a spark, when struck, & that spark is the business.

But the notion that wood on wood, rubbing vigorously, could lead to heat, and that heat could cause small, lit embers to form? Where does that line of logic originate from? Sure, they'd been woodworking in all manners, but in what manner was wood on wood friction a part of that experience? How to you get to that conclusion? From their perspective, that's some genius level shit.

There's a lot of stuff like that, that've I've wondered how it actually happened the very first time. There's so much stuff we do now that seems kind of weird when you really think about.

See this is the kind of stuff I love to think about. What was the first person to make fire thinking? They must have witnessed forest fires and fires caused by natural events like lightning, but that whole process of thinking "how can I do this?" it would be fascinating to learn.
 
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