funny-and-interestinggg
funny-and-interestinggg
Things That I Find Funny Or Interesting.
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funny-and-interestinggg · 5 years ago
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2020 Census: Everyone Counts
It’s that time again. Census time! Once every ten years the federal government counts every single person living in the U.S. of A. in order to effectively allocate representation and resources across the country. It’s an ambitious endeavor, for sure, but one designed to benefit everyone by making sure each community can adequately fund crucial public goods and services, like roads, hospitals, and schools. It determines how many seats each state gets in the U.S. House of Representatives. Also, congressional and state legislative boundaries are drawn and redrawn based on the data collected. Political representation at the state and federal level hinges on census participation. That’s a big deal!
The census count kicked off in March, with its biggest push for people to respond on their own in April, a.k.a. tax month. Although people in the U.S. pay federal income taxes every year, only once every decade do we have the power to influence how those dollars come back to us
The census is a nine-part questionnaire that takes just 10 minutes to complete. To combat all the misinformation flying around about what the census is and how the collected data is used, we’re gonna bust some of the myths and answer a few of the frequently asked questions:
Is there a citizenship question?
No. The courts have permanently blocked asking respondent their citizenship status and the courts have permanently blocked the Trump administration from adding one. Furthermore, federal law prohibits the Census Bureau from sharing individual census information with any person, organization or government body, including law enforcement. Your responses can only be used for statistical purposes (individual records are released only after 72 years!).
What will you be asked?
The questionnaire asks for basic demographic information such as age, race, type of housing, etc. It will not ask for compromising or sensitive information like social security numbers, bank account numbers, or immigration status.
Who should be counted on the Census?
Every person living in the United States, regardless of citizenship status, including kids and babies!
How can I take the Census?
Great news! Completing the census questionnaire is literally the easiest it’s ever been. For the first time ever, you can complete the census online at 2020Census.gov or by phone at 844-330-2020. Also, by April 1st, every home will receive a mailed notice to participate in the 2020 Census.
When is the deadline?
Ideally, Uncle Sam would like to receive your data by April 30th. But as of right now, you can respond on your own all the way until mid-August. If you don’t respond on your own by the end of May, a Census worker may come to your home and ask to record your answers in person. And while it was funny on screen, please do not behave like Christopher Walken in this classic SNL Census sketch.
Is it safe?
Yes. The census is safe, your information is handled with the utmost confidentiality meaning that no one can take your data and use it against you. Your individual data will not be shared with any person, organization or government body, including other federal agencies or any law enforcement or housing authorities. It’s to your benefit to participate.
Sure, filling out a form sounds boring, but it helps to think of it as an opportunity to make your voices heard in a way that really matters. That sounds exciting, no? Plus, you only have to spend 10 minutes doing it once every 10 years.
Make sure to pass this information to your friends and family in order to stop the spread of misinformation. If you have any questions, please check out the United States Census Bureau Fact Sheet.
Please visit 2020census.gov for more information.
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funny-and-interestinggg · 5 years ago
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Edward Hopper, 1925; Charles Addams, 1946; and Alfred Hitchcock, 1960; The Comic Worlds of Peter Arno, William Steig, Charles Addams, and Saul Steinberg, by Iain Topliss, 2007
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funny-and-interestinggg · 5 years ago
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“Tell me about yourself - your struggles, your dreams, your telephone number.” Peter Arno 
The New Yorker, August 1952, cover art by Peter Arno
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funny-and-interestinggg · 5 years ago
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“Come in, come in, whoever you are!" 
Cartoon by Peter Arno, 1949.
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funny-and-interestinggg · 5 years ago
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The New Yorker, ca. 1942
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funny-and-interestinggg · 5 years ago
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stanley kubrick, peter arno with model
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funny-and-interestinggg · 5 years ago
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Gahan Wilson     1969
Gahan Wilson  -  1930-2019  -  Ave atque Vale
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funny-and-interestinggg · 5 years ago
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— Gahan Wilson
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funny-and-interestinggg · 5 years ago
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R.I.P. GAHAN WILSON
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funny-and-interestinggg · 5 years ago
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Lucien Freud, Night Portrai 2 (1978)
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funny-and-interestinggg · 5 years ago
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Window to the Soul
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Details taken from: Frida Kahlo’s ‘Self-Portrait with Thorn Necklace and Hummingbird’ (1940), Ford Madox Brown’s ‘The Irish Girl’ (1860), Pablo Picasso’s sketch of Francoise Gilot (approx. 1946), Paul Cezanne’s ‘Le paysan’/‘Peasant’ (1891), Johannes Vermeer’s ‘Girl with a Pearl Earring’ (1665), Vincent Van Gogh’s Self-Portrait (1889), Henri Matisse’s ‘Self-Portrait in a Striped Shirt’ (1906), Laura Knight’s sketch of Elizabeth II (1950), Francis Bacon’s Self-Portrait (1969), Lucian Freud’s ‘Head of a Girl’ (1976), Fayum Mommy Portrait (1st-3rd C.), Elizabeth Catlett’s Untitled Portrait (approx.1947).
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funny-and-interestinggg · 5 years ago
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Sleeping Social Worker II,1995 Lucien Freud
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funny-and-interestinggg · 5 years ago
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Girl in Bed (1952), Lucien Freud
3x17 The Raid, Riverdale (dir. Pamela Romanowsky)
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funny-and-interestinggg · 5 years ago
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April 22, 2020
society6.com/abiwhales
etsy.com/shop/abigailkart
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funny-and-interestinggg · 5 years ago
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Girl Reading (c.1955). Raphael Soyer (American, 1899-1987). Conte crayon and watercolor on paper.
Raphael left school at age sixteen to help support the family, but nonetheless attended free classes at the Cooper Union and the National Academy of Design. At the Art Students League, Soyer studied under Boardman Robinson and Guy Pène du Bois. Impressed by the young man’s talent, du Bois introduced him to Charles Daniel, a well-known dealer at the time, who gave him his first solo exhibition in 1929.
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funny-and-interestinggg · 5 years ago
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Nude Model in Studio. Raphael Soyer (American, 1899-1987). Oil on canvas.
Soyer’s portrayals of derelicts, working people, and the unemployed around Union Square during the Depression reveal more of a poignant vision of the human condition than the art of social protest popular with many of his contemporaries. Throughout his life Soyer painted people—his friends, himself, studio models—with an unerring eye for intimacy and mood.
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funny-and-interestinggg · 5 years ago
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Hippy Girl   -   Raphel Soyer
American, 1899-1987
oil on canvas, 26 x 32 in. (66.0 x 81.2 cm)
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