Internet browsing can be very productive when searching for
specific information or a certain product.
Enter a few key words into the search box of your preferred search
engine. Or in short: Google it.
I needed to find an old technical book last week and I
entered the title and author and quickly found three sources for this book
through a Google search. I had a lottery
ticket sitting around for a few weeks and wanted to check to see if it was a
winner. Google Texas Lottery and bingo a
link to winning numbers showed at the top of the list. Quick and productive answers to exact questions
are the norm for Google (and other search engines).
But when casually “surfing the net” distractions can quickly
cause the surfer (me) to follow various related and other not so related links
and go wildly off course. My interest in
local examples of street or public art started me on a wandering course last
week after seeing a newspaper story about a trio of new murals in San Antonio. It started with a Pinterest search for “street
art San Antonio.” I found a picture of a
piece of art under a bridge. My eye
caught a glimpse of a “stereotype map of the world.” Then on that website I found a stereotype map
of the United States. I downloaded images of both maps and went to creator’s
web page and saw numerous other maps and projects by the artist.
Alpha Designer Map of USA |
Thoughts of the novel The Ugly American popped into my
head. My mind was off on another
direction for the moment. Perhaps I’ll
get a copy and reread it.
From this rambling process about stereotypes I created a
rough outline for a blog about stereotypes.
Find a definition, examples, read a story or two about recent public
cases and remember my own experiences, both being stereotyped and a user of
stereotypes and put these ideas to paper (digital paper). Neither personal experience was very
pleasant. Soon this draft reached a
block that I think I could overcome if I wanted to get serious. Serious is not my nature, I tend to be more
casual and I definitely don’t take myself serious to point of preaching to
other people on what to do. So a blog on
stereotype went into my to-do list for future blogs.
Then a story appeared TV:
Newark's listing as the world’s most unfriendly city. My hometown made the news! It is common knowledge that TV news is abbreviated
so I went to the Internet to find out more, find the truth. Newark is the most unfriendly city in the
world. 46,000 people were surveyed and
my hometown is on the top of a list, just ahead of Islamabad. I am so pumped. NUMBER ONE!
WE’RE NUMBER ONE.
Newark |
This explains two important personal matters to me. I know how the title of my unpublished novel,
Far from Newark, formed in my mind. Now
would be a perfect time to finish the novel and capitalize on the Newark
publicity. Timing is everything. NUMBER ONE BEST SELLER ABOUT THE NUMBER ONE
UNFRIENDLIEST CITY: Far from Newark.
As mentioned in previous blogs I am the proud owner of a
numbers of signs that proudly proclaim me as a crab, gifts from my sons as
acknowledgement of certain personality traits that they have assigned to
me.
My gift back to them is knowledge that the crab trait shouldn’t be passed to them, it is environmental, not genetic. But don’t stereotype people from Newark as crabby; we all know they are just unfriendly.
My gift back to them is knowledge that the crab trait shouldn’t be passed to them, it is environmental, not genetic. But don’t stereotype people from Newark as crabby; we all know they are just unfriendly.
Additional Thoughts about Newark
Famous People from Newark
Philip Roth, Stephen Crane, Jerry Lewis, Joe Pesci, Whitney
Houston, Paul Simon, Aaron Burr, Ed Koch, H. Norman Schwarzkopt, Shaquille O’Neal,
Chris Christie, Ice-T, Queen Latifah: Source link.
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