[S9E14] Written In The Stars
[S9E14] Written In The Stars ::: https://bytlly.com/2tl4KB
\"Vandalism\" is the fourteenth episode of the ninth season of the American comedy television series The Office and the 190th episode overall. The episode was written by Owen Ellickson. It was directed by Lee Kirk, who is series star Jenna Fischer's husband. It originally aired on NBC on January 31, 2013. The episode guest stars Chris Diamantopoulos as Brian the boom mike operator, Mark Proksch as Nate, Brad William Henke as Frank, and Ameenah Kaplan as Val.
\"Vandalism\" was written by supervising producer Owen Ellickson, making it his third writing credit for the series.[2] It was directed by Lee Kirk.[2] This marks his first directorial entry for the series, although he had previously guest starred as the minor character Clark in the sixth season episode \"The Delivery\".[2][3] Kirk is also Fischer's husband.[3][4][5] The episode guest stars Diamantopoulos as Brian the boom mike operator, his third appearance after the preceding two episodes. Proksch returns as Nate, as does Kaplan as Val. This is the first episode to feature Henke as Frank.[2] Daniels had teased in an interview that one character would be fired from the show \"in Episode 15\".[6] Although \"Vandalism\" was the fourteenth episode aired, it was actually the fifteenth produced, based on production numbers.[1]
\"Das Bus\" is the fourteenth episode of the ninth season of the American animated television series The Simpsons. It originally aired on Fox in the United States on February 15, 1998. In an extended parody of Lord of the Flies, Bart, Lisa, and other students from Springfield Elementary School are stranded on an island and are forced to work together. Meanwhile, Homer founds his own Internet company. It was written by David X. Cohen and directed by Pete Michels. Guest star James Earl Jones narrates the final scene of the episode.[1]
It's enough to make you think that everyone in Hollywood has a six-degrees-of-Kevin-Bacon-style connection to the show. Like, what do you make of the fact that both the Dean from Community and the principal from Glee had a few lines on Friends before hitting it big Or that Jane \"Sue Sylvester\" Lynch appeared along with most of her Christopher Guest mockumentary co-stars, Bob Balaban, Michael McKean, Jennifer Coolidge, Fred Willard, and Harry Shearer
Thanks peakae. I love your assessment of why this episode was so unsatisfying. The most distressing part to me is that it was written by one of my two favorite writers. I had much higher expectations of the episode exactly because of that.
\"Scars\" is the fourteenth episode of the ninth season of AMC's The Walking Dead. It is the one-hundred and twenty-ninth episode of the series overall. It premiered on March 17, 2019. It was written by Corey Reed & Vivian Tse and directed by Millicent Shelton.
The pre run feature showed footage of Kacy training for her new career as a WWE superstar. Also, plenty of fellow Ninja stars gave words of tribute to the retiring ninja. So once again, I would be shocked if this is not her final run.
Sorry, but I enjoyed this show because it was, in my opinion, well written and a good story. I guess there will always be hard feelings because of Goren & Eames, but the writing for this season, for the most part, has been very good...much better than the last few seasons of SVU.
The Naked and the Dead, But Mostly the Naked was the 14th episode of Season 9 of Married... with Children, also the 197th overall series episode. Directed by Sam W. Orender, and written by Michael G. Moye, the episode originally aired on FOX, premiering on January 8, 1995.
the dateable podcast is an Insider's look into modern dating that the Huffington Post calls one of the top 10 podcasts about love and sex on each episode will talk to real daters about everything from sex birth defects droughts date fails to diaper fetishes and first moves to First loves I'm your host you issue former dating coach turned dating sociologists you also hear from my co host and producer Julie craft long as we explore this crazy dateable world hey everyone welcome to another episode of datable a show all about modern dating off and we did we make decisions and those decisions are usually informed by what we think is our brain but usually there is so much more that affects how we make decisions who we choose to go on dates with how we feel about them there's just this whole science to it and we have an expert to talk about that whole thing you never think about it you just think that's the way it works right we just assumed That this is just our own intelligence feeding us disinformation where it's the way you are, you know, I was born with it. It's you know, it's my personality. So our guest today, her name is Logan is 31 years old. She's lived in San Francisco for nine years originally from South Florida and currently in a monogamous relationships. She's here to talk about what's called a night this word. I always have a hard time saying it behavioral economics. It's like such a tongue twister for me basically the signs of how and why we make decisions and how this applies a dating and relationships. What is this What does behavioral economics Why should we care That was a great introduction Thank you so much for having me. The idea behind behavioral economics is that there's this field of Economics, which you're probably familiar with which assumes that everyone's rational. It thinks that people make a cost-benefit analysis before making decisions. And then there's the field of psychology that thinks about how our brains work and what's going into our decision-making and kind of how we're wired job. And how I'm different from you and behavioral economics combined those two, so it's basically saying people make decisions but actually in these irrational ways, but we make decisions in the same irrational always so our brains are often clouded by these things called cognitive biases, but the same ones appear over and over and if we understand what those cognitive bias, he's our then we could help make better decisions so I can tell you about a really famous example say you were looking at Mike's I could show you this chart of organ donation rates across Europe and you would see that some have an organ donation rate of around ninety nine or 98% and other countries have an organ donation rate of around one or two or 3% And if I said to you, why are some countries I and some countries low like what are some of the things that you might guess people want to donate in some places and not others and that they are taught morally that it's that it's better if you donate your organs or it's a religious thing if you donate you have a better afterlife or maybe like friends and fam. We have donated their organs. They think it's something they should do. Yeah, those are great guesses. So usually when I show this graph two people, they'll say things like, oh some of those countries are religious and some are in or maybe In some cultures value organ donations and in others, they think it's weird. But actually when you look at the graph, you can see that countries that are really similar. So like they actually have really different organ donation rates. And the point of this is that the reason why summer a high and some are really low is that in some countries when you go to the DMV and you sign up for a driver's license, it says check the box if you don't want to be an organ donor and in other countries, it says check the box. If you do want to be an organ donor and in either way people don't check the box and they just become what the default is. What's so fascinating about this example is organ donation rates matter a lot. It's about how may lives are saved how long it takes to get the organ but it's being decided by the way. The Forum is written and the lesson that we get from that is a lot of our decisions are just made by what's the default So In some cultures Is the default is to be an organ donor in other countries the default is to not be an organ donor and because of something called the path of least resistance. We just don't check the box. It was so fascinating as when people are leaving the DMV and you say to them. Why did you sign up to be an organ donor They'll make up a reason they'll say oh, you know somebody in my family was affected by this and received an organ and they'll they'll rationalize they'll give you an explanation for why they'll never say because the form was opt out and if you say to somebody why didn't you know, they'll say oh it's creepy or this and that they won't say it's because the form was opt-in. We need all based on these crazy different rates that that's really what's going on here. So how does this apply to dating So that's just one example of how behavioral economics works and there's a few lessons. I want you to get from that one is a default really matter too is that there's this thing called path of least resistance. We resist making hard decisions. We just go with whatever's there and then three is we don't really understand what's behind the decision off. We're making and we explain it in a different way cuz we think we're rational.
Yep. I'm using quotes. The app is a quote unquote environment and you can shift your behavior by shifting your environment changing your app preferences to broader categories knowing that actually you probably don't know what you want is a really good way of going on different types of dates. So what are some other ways cuz I love that first one that you gave to like what are some other ways that people can kind of change their environments. So I have this whole rant that I love to go on about critic culture. So my thought on is that we live in a culture that's really obsessed with ratings and reviews and you know, you were in an Uber and how many stars did you give it And you're in an Airbnb and what that does is it trains are brand to look for negative things. So cuz that's all Yelp reviews are and nothing for everything. So if you're familiar with the research on gratitude journals, the reason why gratitude journals work is that if at night you have to write down five good things that happened to you during the day that you're grateful for all day. You're looking for things to be grateful dead. So maybe in your gratitude Journal, you're right Bart only came every 19 minutes and I got there right as it arrived and I didn't miss Bart actually never understood the origin of the fact that you're walking throughout the whole day. I thought it was more just to like be thankful of what you had not what you didn't want like, I think that's true. But the reason why it works is that you are training your brain to look for driving. So if I said to you look around and tell me all the things in the room that are green right now your filtering for green and similarly with the Gratitude Journal your filtering for things that are good. I love that cuz I think in the past I've had trouble with them or size cuz I'm like, I feel like the stuff I'm writing down today so mundane, but I think if you looked at a big picture of like how it's helping you overall, maybe there's like a different impact. Oh, yeah and my boyfriend and I have a game. Thing that we came up with the called the good news rule, which is that when something bad happens, we know that we would talk about it a lot. But when something good happens, we rarely give it the same amount of airtime. Yeah. So the good news is when something good happens. You actually have to talk about it and appreciate it and give it as much space as you would give the negative interesting. So when you apply kind of the science behind the Gratitude journal to dating I feel like people are going on dates and looking for the negatives. So they're going on the data and they're saying he wore socks with sandals. He was he I offered to pay and he said yes and I feel like they're like collecting stories for Sunday brunch with their friends and their training their brains to look for the negative. No wonder they're like, I can't find someone great. So for my dating clients, and now my friends I have them text me five good things immediately after the date can be so simple. They can be he looked really happy and alive when he told a story about his little brother or you know, she did Teach for America and I really respect that really they can log Super detailed, but I'm helping them train their brains to go into the date looking for different things and that's changing the environment to have a different experience that if you can't think of any that may be really with the wrong that's happened where I'm like, oh my God, it was made him into your account and this must have been brought that they still do that exercise. Like I read it and I'm like, okay, there's no way they're going out that again. I bet they still had a better time on the date than if they've done that. Yes. I love goes into like what I said before that your brain is in evidence Seeker. It's not the truth Seeker. So whatever Theory you're trying to support your brain will automatically see those things along really well said so with that idea. What about this Scenario Logan we've had a lot of people come to us and say I haven't had much relationship experience relationships last two to three months if you've been off on that and they don't amount to a serious relationship now, they find themselves in their mid-to-late thirties. They want to start a family and they're starting to see this pattern that they can't keep a relationship they become so in their head Become so much about them. What am I doing wrong How can I change myself and they become so negative about themselves. What do people do at this point What advice would you give them What advice do you give I actually feel like I kind of went through this myself at one point. It was a little different but it was like it was like when tender first came out and I was going on all these dates and like they never really went past like date three or four and I started to think like, is there something wrong with me and I think that there is a point that you are the common denominator, but also like you can't just look focus on the negative to the point you just said or that's counterproductive also cuz you're not going away anywhere. So I think what I started to look at is like how do I show up in relationships and other parts of my life too Like I am a really good friend like I am a really good sister. I am a really good daughter like what are those things that I bring to a relationship and that helped get confidence to actually like show up that way when I was dating for me. I feel like for a lot of these experiences it goes wage. Deeper than their dating lives so a stems from their childhood a stems from yes experiences that they've collected and I tell them to go to therapy cuz I think there's just a lot more to uncover their but I think that's what it is. 59ce067264
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