Devenir chêvre

‘Devenir chêvre’, or ‘to become a goat’, means to get angry. This is interesting when contrasted with the English idiom ‘to get your goat’.
devenir chevre - - Favourite french idioms - language - MyFrenchLife

The origins of this phrase are founded in the fact that goats used to be housed with cattle, as it was believed they had a calming effect. Consequently, if you ‘got someone’s goat’ it would result in agitated cattle.
The French obviously had other ideas about the temperament of goats. According to Expressio, goats were brusque and aggressive, hence the use of ‘devenir chêvre’ to denote someone getting angry.

Appreciation Friday: Nick Cave

ARTSY
Nick Cave's first Soundsuit above  | HIS WEBSITE

SCARY!

A vintage ventriloquist and his dummy

bless that dave letterman

CRIMINAL

(click) Podcast Episode 45: Just Mercy (6.17.2016)

As a law student, Bryan Stevenson was sent to a maximum security prison to meet a man on death row. The man told Stevenson he’d never met an African-American lawyer, and the two of them talked for hours. It was a day that changed Stevenson’s life. He’s spent the last 30 years working to get people off of death row, but has also spent the final hours with men he could not save from execution. He argues that each of us is deserving of mercy.

Learn more about Bryan Stevenson in his book, Just Mercy.

Criminal is hiring.

We’re a proud member of Radiotopia, from PRX, a curated network of extraordinary, story-driven shows. Learn more at radiotopia.fm.

Say hello on Twitter @criminalshow or Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ThisIsCriminal/

Indian Givers NEIL YOUNG

A Supervolcano Waking Up In The USA

puppies rescued

Dogs rescued from the Titanic (yet they don't look happy)

(swoon-worthy) Assholes Episode 7 TIFF

wookie and me

"Model Wookie Mayer turns sixty this fall. (me too)  Aside from her obvious good genes and bone structure, I think a lot of her beauty comes from her natural style – unfussy hair, toned body, minimal makeup. I’m taking note of the less is more approach…let skin show through a lightly bronzed face, add color to lips, keep eyes bright and natural. A few wrinkles actually look appropriate and add to her appeal."
 I'm not quite ready for my close-up (working on it though) BOOM

BOOM in the pacific

A-bomb testing at Bikini Atoll in the Pacific



I kinda think this was hugely damaging...BOOM

Bikini Atoll — The Birthplace of Godzilla

MARSHALL ISLANDS

The "Baker" explosion, a nuclear weapon test at Bikini Atoll, Micronesia, 1946.
The "Baker" explosion, a nuclear weapon test at Bikini Atoll, Micronesia, 1946. 
(Photo: U.S. Department of Defense/Public Domain

Located about halfway between Hawaii and Australia, this Micronesian Island chain should be a heavenly place on Earth. Unfortunately that is not at all the case. Its residents were forcibly relocated when the U.S. took possession of the islands in 1946, and over the next 12 years sent 23 nuclear bombs raining down on this slice of paradise, rendering it uninhabitable to this day.
During the first practical test of a hydrogen bomb at Bikini, 23 members of a Japanese fishing boat crew that were supposedly at a safe distance were contaminated by the blast, and the scandal that rocked the nation was epic. It eventually became the inspiration for the movie Godzilla, in which a radioactive monster rises from a U.S. nuclear test and attacks Japan. To this day, the islands sadly remain a paradise of staggering beauty and potential that no one can safely experience.

history in photos

These are kind of a big deal for me and other BOOMERS

A 550lb diving suit from the 1900’s

go look at more HERE

Lunch hour, on set of Star Wars

Acid Cow

what you missed




I had this blog rock paper scizzors - and these were some of the craziest photos I found... BOOM



they disappear, then we do

1.5 Billion Birds Lost in North America Since 1970s


By Nika Knight | EW

North America has lost more than 1.5 billion birds over the past 40 years, says the most comprehensive survey of landbird populations in Canada and the U.S. to date, and 86 species are threatened with total extinction—all thanks to human-caused habitat destruction and climate change.




Golden-winged warblers are one of the North American species most at risk for complete extinction. Caleb Putnam / Flickr

"Among those 86 species, 22 have already lost at least half of their population since 1970 and are projected to lose another 50 percent of their numbers within the next 40 years," reported the Canadian Press. "For at least six species, this 'half-life' window is fewer than 20 years."
"The information on urgency is quite alarming," study co-author Judith Kennedy of Environment Canada said to the Canadian Press. "We're really getting down to the dregs of some of these populations."


"I don't want my grandchild to go out in the forest and not hear the songbirds in the spring and that seems to be where we're headed right now," Andrew Couturier, senior analyst at Bird Studies Canada and a co-author of the report, told the Globe and Mail.
The report by Canadian conservation group Partners in Flight was released in August but was first widely reported on Wednesday by the Canadian Press and Globe and Mail.
The California condor, Gunnison sage grouse, ivory-billed woodpecker and Bachman's warbler are a few of the more well-known species on Partners in Flight's "Red Watch List," meaning they are the most at risk of extinction.
Those facing the most dramatic population declines are grassland birds, sagebrush and desert scrub species "and forest species dependent on specialized structural features or natural disturbance," the report says.
Indeed, another recent study just confirmed that the habitat of endangered sage grouses in 11 western U.S. states is being torn up because of "rampant" oil, gas and gold mining, precipitating the devastating loss of most of their chicks, the Washington Post reported Thursday.
The Globe and Mail noted:
"Even relatively abundant birds are dwindling in number, the report says. Chimney swifts, field sparrows and short-eared owls are among the common species that have lost more than half of their populations since 1970 and are expected to lose half of their current level in 40 years or less."
"Birds are often a bellwether of broader ecological health," Kennedy said to the Globe and Mail. Kennedy "noted that sickly birds were an early warning sign of the environmental damage caused by the pesticide DDT a generation ago."
"In some ways, the status of these birds could indicate the status of our own health," Kennedy warned.
This article was reposted with permission from our media associate Common Dreams.

you need this

you need this... at least I know I did... I recently watched the movie Two Brothers about two tigers... *GREAT GREAT GRRREAT FILM (grrrr)


just a reminder

  good reminders!  


oh yeah...

oh yeah...

Trace's book