Seattle Slobs
Seattle Slobs
I just found this in Seattle Times. (I love this paper.)
We're more likely to wear a wrinkled shirt to work — 23 percent would in Seattle, compared with the national average of 17.8 percent.
• Almost all the cities surveyed are doing more ironing, up an average 8.8 percent nationally. Seattle residents showed a 1 percent decrease.
• Only 8.9 percent of us think jeans are inappropriate for work, compared with 15.9 percent nationally.
• Only 7.4 percent of us think tight or revealing clothing is wrong for work, compared with 12.5 percent nationally.
• Just 1.5 percent of us find unkempt/dirty clothing uncool at work, compared with 5.3 percent nationally.
linky here
We're more likely to wear a wrinkled shirt to work — 23 percent would in Seattle, compared with the national average of 17.8 percent.
• Almost all the cities surveyed are doing more ironing, up an average 8.8 percent nationally. Seattle residents showed a 1 percent decrease.
• Only 8.9 percent of us think jeans are inappropriate for work, compared with 15.9 percent nationally.
• Only 7.4 percent of us think tight or revealing clothing is wrong for work, compared with 12.5 percent nationally.
• Just 1.5 percent of us find unkempt/dirty clothing uncool at work, compared with 5.3 percent nationally.
linky here
Seattle Slobs
shit! I knew there was a reason I moved here!
Seattle Slobs
Oh no, please don't get me started about just how inane the Seattle Times is. Here we are on the brink of war and it is amazing what they will fill their front page with...plus their writers
make the most embarassing grammatical gaffes and I'm not even an English major or anyone who's a stickler about that sort of thing, but it makes me
tremble to think that teachers might be using that paper to try to teach kids how to write...
And the Seattle P-I is not much better. Would you
believe there was a story in there yesterday that used to term "waked up" in the very first sentence? Past tense of "wake" anyone??? These people call themselves reporters? Journalists?
Editors?
BTW, Sloth do you ever read the UK weekly called the Guardian? I discovered that paper recently and found it a delightful anti-thesis to the Seattle Times.
make the most embarassing grammatical gaffes and I'm not even an English major or anyone who's a stickler about that sort of thing, but it makes me
tremble to think that teachers might be using that paper to try to teach kids how to write...
And the Seattle P-I is not much better. Would you
believe there was a story in there yesterday that used to term "waked up" in the very first sentence? Past tense of "wake" anyone??? These people call themselves reporters? Journalists?
Editors?
BTW, Sloth do you ever read the UK weekly called the Guardian? I discovered that paper recently and found it a delightful anti-thesis to the Seattle Times.
Seattle Slobs
I read the Guardian every day. Today they quoted a German politician on the front page who called Bush a modern day Adolf Hitler.
That's pretty bad. I've never even heard a German use the 'H' word before.
The Guardian rocks.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,3604,795582,00.html
That's pretty bad. I've never even heard a German use the 'H' word before.
The Guardian rocks.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,3604,795582,00.html
Seattle Slobs
Well im not saying i love it for the content, it just seems to me that they are good at making fun of themselves. But i have read the guardian and it is a very goood paper.
- mccutcheon
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Seattle Slobs
the people here in Tempe dress nice and take lots of showers.
Seattle Slobs
well of course they take showers often, you sweat buckets. its insane really.
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