greed-man
greed-man t1_jae6f6w wrote
"You had ONE job...."
greed-man t1_ja7ko02 wrote
Reply to comment by DiabeticPissingSyrup in TIL of David Sarnoff, the head of RCA and NBC who suppressed and then stole FM radio and Television from their inventors, driving one to suicide and the other to alcoholism. by Dega704
I see your point, but put this in context.
Baird invented a TV process that gained very little traction. It absolutely worked, BBC was using it (although receiving sets were far and few between), but BBC gave up on it as newer methods came along. Baird's picture quality was poor (30 lines), and not portable in any way. 99% of the world had no idea that this even existed.
Farnsworth invented the process of electronic TV, along with Zworkin's CRT tube, which had much better picture, was much more portable, and reliable. It became the standard that the world adopted.
greed-man t1_ja7j1os wrote
Reply to comment by DiabeticPissingSyrup in TIL of David Sarnoff, the head of RCA and NBC who suppressed and then stole FM radio and Television from their inventors, driving one to suicide and the other to alcoholism. by Dega704
Baird invented one method of television. What is referred to as a mechanical version. It worked.
Farnsworth invented a different method, what is referred to as electronic. The market chose the electronic method. It worked.
Both statements are correct.
greed-man t1_ja66uhi wrote
Reply to comment by FLEXXMAN33 in TIL On long-haul flights, flight attendants have hidden sleeping areas above the passenger compartment. by real_zexy_specialist
Many airlines used it for that. When the 747 first came out, pricing was still under control of the Feds (this is pre-deregulation). Initially, if you offered a 747 from say, Chicago to LA, and your competitors didn't, you probably gained business. But when everybody had them and was doing that, you had to do something to differentiate yourself for the exact same airfare. So some turned them into bars, lounges, and yes, American offered piano bars.
greed-man t1_j9qu7gl wrote
Reply to comment by mikess484 in TIL Sheriff Jordan, the leader of the posse that killed Bonnie & Clyde, attempted to keep the stolen car in which they were ambushed and shot to death. The car's legal owner sued the Sheriff for possession of the car then drove it to Shreveport, still covered with blood & human tissue. by Shark-Farts
Barrow loved the Ford V8 (this was a 1934 model). He wrote a letter on April 10, 1934, to Henry Ford: "While I still have got breath in my lungs I will tell you what a dandy car you make. I have drove Fords exclusively when I could get away with one. For sustained speed and freedom from trouble the Ford has got every other car skinned and even if my business hasn't been strictly legal it don't hurt anything to tell you what a fine car you got in the V-8."
greed-man t1_j1ywhhp wrote
Reply to is there any show with more spin-offs and spin-offs-of-spin-offs than All in the Family? by [deleted]
Beverly Hillbillies
Petticoat Junction
Green Acres
All would visit Sam Drucker's General Store from time to time.
greed-man OP t1_j1risso wrote
Reply to comment by BillTowne in TIL Kellogg's Corn Flakes were invented by accident. A batch of wheat based dough was left out overnight by accident, started to ferment, so Will Kellogg decided to roll it to see if this would squeeze the water out. Instead, they got wheat flakes. Corn Flakes was the real winner. by greed-man
Yes. They developed flaking by accident. They tried marketing wheat flakes, it did okay, but not great, but when they developed corn flakes, the process became the dominant method for many cereals. Years later, after the success of Wheaties, Kellogg's circled back to wheat flakes with Pep in 1924, and then "fortified" them with vitamins starting in 1930.
Wheaties, in turn, had been developed also by accident, when a plant worker spilled a wheat mixture on a hot stove. They played with many different formulations, finally got what they wanted, and named it Washburn's Gold Medal Whole Wheat Flakes. The name was changed to Wheaties later, after an in-house contest for the best name.
TIL Kellogg's Corn Flakes were invented by accident. A batch of wheat based dough was left out overnight by accident, started to ferment, so Will Kellogg decided to roll it to see if this would squeeze the water out. Instead, they got wheat flakes. Corn Flakes was the real winner.
history.comSubmitted by greed-man t3_zvaoif in todayilearned
greed-man t1_j01lxcb wrote
These are VERY cool.
greed-man t1_its6faa wrote
Reply to comment by brb1006 in Jules Bass, Producer Behind the ‘Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer’ and ‘Frosty the Snowman’ TV Specials, Dies at 87 by Melanismdotcom
Don't forget ThunderCats!!
greed-man OP t1_isxz3xa wrote
Reply to comment by Blutarg in TIL The Arthur Miller play "Death of a Salesman" is the only Broadway play to have won the Tony Award for Best Play four times. The original production in 1949, and the revivals in 1984, 1999, and 2012. by greed-man
About an hour and forty-five minutes, with one intermission.
greed-man OP t1_isw1yux wrote
Reply to comment by JimDixon in TIL The Arthur Miller play "Death of a Salesman" is the only Broadway play to have won the Tony Award for Best Play four times. The original production in 1949, and the revivals in 1984, 1999, and 2012. by greed-man
Wendell played Willy on London's West End in 2019, and was nominated for the Lawrence Olivier Award for Best Actor, the British equivalent to a Tony.
greed-man t1_jeh0yd3 wrote
Reply to comment by regular6drunk7 in TIL: “EGOT” is an acronym that was coined by actor Philip Michael Thomas. It gained wider recognition after being introduced on the comedy series “30 Rock” by lily_noodlez
No one, as yet, has won the PENGOT award, which includes the above PLUS winning the Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest.