Nick Offerman from Parks and Recreation reads tweets from young female celebrities
I helped put together this piece that was on yesterday’s Conan from writer Brian Stack called: “Nick Offerman from Parks and Recreation reads tweets from young female celebrities”
There’s something about our dog Sullivan that suddenly makes my crappy phone camera’s photos amazing. It must be a dog thing. Or a golden retriever thing. I’ll now be taking him everywhere to have with me on hand (or paw) when I need a decent photo.
Oh, and the last one doesn’t really have anything to do with Sullivan. Though, he was standing next to me at the time…
Stephen Sondheim on Leonard Bernstein
- Terry Gross: Did you learn anything working with Bernstein and watching him work?
- Stephen Sondheim: Oh, sure. A great deal. Yes. Mainly I learned something about courage. I learned – Lenny was never afraid to make big mistakes. He was never afraid to fall off the top rung of the ladder and I learned by implication that the worst thing you can do is fall off a low rung. If you're going to make a mistake, make a huge one.
Email Etiquette Question
You send a question to a few people who might have the answer. One person replies with the answer, but doesn’t Reply All. Is it then YOUR responsibility to reply to the rest of the group (sans the person who initially replied) with their reply just to let them know they don’t need to reply?
Thanks, you guys.
This is what I did today.
We’re in the process of adding an interactive seat map on our Ticketmaster.com event pages. Users will be able to choose their specific seat and — if desired — can see where their Facebook friends are sitting.
But first, I had to send a nice digital copy of our seating chart.
There wasn’t one.
I’d considered scanning in the old, hand-drawn version of the chart (with individual seats), but that wasn’t going to work.
I ended up using Illustrator to trace the newer scanned version. I learned how to use lines and arcs…lots of them.
My eyes are tired.
This. Is. Amazing. A great way to display all of these massive numbers in a clean, informative way. Loved it.
Also: More Buddhists on Earth than there are Americans. Who knew?
(Source: dkleeman)


