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How Well Do You Know The 1980's? Take This Trivia Quiz To Find Out!

How Well Do You Know The 1980's? Take This Trivia Quiz To Find Out!

Buzz Feed16-03-2025
This post has not been vetted or endorsed by BuzzFeed's editorial staff. BuzzFeed Community is a place where anyone can create a post or quiz. Try making your own!
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Let's lace up those roller skates and put on the Boom Box! Take this totally tubular 1980's trivia quiz to test your knowledge.
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These 17 Ridiculously Funny Signs Had Me Cackling Like The Evil Witch That I Am
These 17 Ridiculously Funny Signs Had Me Cackling Like The Evil Witch That I Am

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time13 hours ago

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These 17 Ridiculously Funny Signs Had Me Cackling Like The Evil Witch That I Am

Welcome to another weekly roundup of Reddit's funniest signs! We found some great signs this week, and have even more to add from our BuzzFeed readers (so be sure to add yours in the comments)!!! Here's last week's roundup if you missed it, but first, let's get to what we found this week! to start carrying around a measuring tape: 2.I guess people will need to get more crafty on where they stash their cash in Louisiana: Related: poor post: yoga: 5.A little helpful guide when parking: 6.A bathroom for when you REALLY have to go: Related: 7.A very bold therapy practice in Lake District, New England: to the cause!: of...: Related: 10.A free reminder: the heck, Wendy's?: the punishment fit the crime: get it: 14.A $6 divorce isn't bad: Related: 15.*speaking magic eight ball* ALL SIGNS POINT TO YES: 16.I wonder how many people Googled "Does gas contain gluten?" after seeing this one: finally, get off the kid toys: We're going to continue to share great signs from Reddit, but we also want to see what YOU find as well! So, if you see a sign that makes you LOL, snap a pic, and share the photo in the comments below. You could be featured in our next roundup! Also in Internet Finds: Also in Internet Finds: Also in Internet Finds:

Hawaiian Woman Response To Chief Of War Language Complaints
Hawaiian Woman Response To Chief Of War Language Complaints

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time13 hours ago

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Hawaiian Woman Response To Chief Of War Language Complaints

Earlier this month, Chief of War premiered on Apple TV+ and completely blew me away. The historical drama focuses on the unification of the Hawaiian islands, mainly from the point of view of Kaʻiana (played by Jason Momoa). As a Polynesian woman, I grew emotional seeing Hawaiian history and culture represented on screen. And so well done, too! From the cinematography to the acting to the costumes, you can feel how much love and care went into the making of this show. Since Chief of War is Jason's longtime passion project, I wouldn't expect anything less! And to hear all the actors speaking ʻōlelo Hawaiʻi (the Hawaiian language) — goosebumps! I never in a million years imagined we'd get a show like this on a major streaming platform in a Pasifika language. What a powerful decision to kick off the series in the language these historical figures actually spoke, one with a complicated history that's being revitalized today. As of the time of writing, Apple TV+ has released three episodes, with more English in the most recent episode due to the historical events explored in the show. So, imagine my surprise when I came across quite a few social media posts criticizing Chief of War for not being in English. Some people were apparently annoyed about reading subtitles, with this X (formerly Twitter) user writing, "What morons make a show for an American audience and put it in a completely foreign language. If I wanted to read, it would be a book." Note: The image of Jason Momoa in the original tweet was replaced here due to photo rights. As more and more of these complaints made the rounds online, some Kānaka Maoli (Native Hawaiian) social media users began pushing back against this terrible take. One such person was Lily Hiʻilani Okimura, a 27-year-old substitute teacher and content creator. In a video posted to TikTok, she criticized the above tweet and explained some Americans might not be the target audience, but that doesn't mean other cultures don't deserve TV shows in their own language. In another video, she gave her review of the first few episodes and emphasized the importance of ʻōlelo Hawaiʻi in the series, saying, "It is not treated as a background element. It is foundational to the storytelling." To learn more, I reached out to Lily, who was "extremely impressed" by Chief of War. She told BuzzFeed, "After watching the first couple episodes and hearing it completely in ʻōlelo Hawaiʻi, my jaw was dropped, and I felt as if I was immersed into the world. Of course, the show will eventually transition more into English as the story progresses and events in our history takes place, but having the beginning of this show and whole episodes be set in Hawaiian was amazing. And ESPECIALLY for Apple TV+?! Wouldn't have thought they would've approved. Jason Momoa and [series co-creator] Thomas Paʻa Sibbett must've fought really hard for this!" Lily began learning ʻōlelo Hawaiʻi in 2020 while studying for her MFA in Hawaiian Theatre. Not only does the Hawaiian language in the show give her the opportunity to follow along and practice, but it "just makes sense" due to the plot and setting, she said. Additionally, this "further normalizes and legitimizes ʻōlelo Hawaiʻi to the outside world and for folks who may have only heard a few of the words in our language like 'aloha' and 'mahalo.'" "Hawaiian is a real language, a Polynesian language from the Austronesian language family," she continued. "It was spoken in our lands for generations before colonialism, and we were forced to speak only English. The Hawaiian language ban affected many ʻohana, including my own, where they couldn't speak it at schools or in public in order to assimilate into this new (forced) American way of living. I'm the first in my family to relearn our mother tongue, and I hope to teach it to my future children, enroll them into Hawaiian Immersion school, and that they will be fluent, and they can teach me!" "Having the show in ʻōlelo Hawaiʻi also brings cultural authenticity, allowing viewers to experience the story through the same lens and worldview our kūpuna (ancestors) did, instead of filtering it through English for outside convenience. It contributes to language revitalization by making ʻōlelo Hawaiʻi visible and functional in a mainstream setting, inspiring more people to learn and speak it. For fluent speakers and immersion students, hearing the language on screen validates their identity and shows that their voices belong in the global media landscape. Just like Korean, Spanish, or French films, it reminds the world that Hawaiian deserves the SAME respect as any other global language." As far as the backlash goes, Lily thinks the complainers are "extremely uncultured and need to get out more." She continued, "There are English subtitles! Can these people not read or what?" before pointing out several examples of other languages in pop culture, from anime to Star Trek's Spock speaking Klingon to Parasite, which won the Oscar for Best Picture in 2020. "We share this planet with billions of people, coming from different backgrounds and cultures and lived experiences. How boring would it be to only experience and consume art and media that only reflects one narrow worldview? Art, history, and storytelling lose so much richness when they're stripped of the language that shaped them. ʻŌlelo Hawaiʻi isn't just a translation option; it's the lens, the rhythm, and the worldview of our people. English was forced here through colonization, and for decades, speaking Hawaiian was punished. Choosing to tell a Hawaiian story in Hawaiian is a deliberate act of resistance and cultural restoration. Complaining about that because it's 'inconvenient' for you isn't just lazy — it's participating in the same erasure that tried to kill our language in the first place." Lily hopes that Chief of War will open the door to more TV shows and movies diving into Hawaiian history and mythology, especially in ʻōlelo Hawaiʻi. "Thus, more opportunities for Kānaka Maoli to tell our stories! More, new, and fresh faces! Maybe an actual TV and film industry here in the islands that's Hawaiian-centered." "E ola ka ʻōlelo Hawaiʻi! The Hawaiian language shall live!" she concluded. To learn more about Kānaka Maoli culture and issues, be sure to follow Lily on TikTok and Instagram! And you can watch Chief of War on Apple TV+ here.

Makeup Metaphors To Replace Sports Talk With At Work
Makeup Metaphors To Replace Sports Talk With At Work

Buzz Feed

timea day ago

  • Buzz Feed

Makeup Metaphors To Replace Sports Talk With At Work

If you're a woman in business, a woman in a male-dominated workplace, or simply just, a woman, you've probably heard one or two sports metaphors overused at work. There's nothing particularly wrong with sports lingo — They're fun! It works! — but sometimes, they are What would it look like if the metaphors were pulled from a different kind field? Like, say, makeup? That's exactly what Ari Kraemer, a 32-year-old marketing professional from Minneapolis, decided to explore. In a viral video, which has since racked up over 3 million views and 401,000 likes, Ari hilariously reimagined what office talk would look like if makeup metaphors replaced the usual sports clichés. "I know we want to move forward with this, we adding the foundation before the primer here?" Ari began in the video. "I'm seeing buying signals, too, but the deal's not over 'til we add our setting spray," she continued with another metaphor idea. "I want to make sure we're finding that balance between dewy and greasy." Ari said she was inspired to come up with makeup metaphors after attending a work seminar where the speaker couldn't refrain from using a sports metaphor every other minute. "It kept distracting from his point," she told BuzzFeed. "My female colleague and I joked about it, and I thought, why not flip the script? Why do we always default to sports and war when talking about business?" Without too much thought and her phone camera in hand, Ari posted the skit on a whim, and it instantly caught on. In the comments, thousands of people loved the idea. "See this is what the Barbie script was missing," one person wrote. "Great analysis of how gendered language is," another said. Of course, the feedback prompted Ari to share more makeup metaphor ideas. Such as, "Yeah, I think that's good for now. Let's let this bake, and we'll dust off tomorrow." And, "You're trying to add the lashes before the glue's even tacky." Or, "We can't dry shampoo our way out of this. This is gonna require a full wash." And lastly, "Look, I just feel like we're highlighting without structure. Where's the contour here?" In the comments, people couldn't resist sharing their own: "we're aiming for a natural glow, not a full beat." "I think we're veering on blush blindness with this, let's scale back." "Let's make sure there's no lipstick on our teeth before the meeting." "The client wants Charlotte Tilbury quality on an NYX budget." "We're already cutting it close. Now's not the time to add a winged liner." Everyone's pretty much saving these in their back pocket for later. "This is the matriarchy I want to live in," one person wrote. Some see this as a way to flip the script and take some power back. "I need a skit now of a room full of women talking this way with a confused male coworker lmaooo," one said. "YES, and then when a man doesn't understand you can just belittle him for not understanding [every] metaphor." Ari said she's already started replacing metaphors at work. "I love slipping them into meetings," she told BuzzFeed. "They get either knowing laughs or blank stares from non-makeup-wearers. It's a fun role reversal. Some of the guys I work with have started catching themselves overusing sports analogies, and have been able to poke fun at themselves." She said others have reached out to her to start switching up their workplace lingo, too. "I've heard from over 100 women who've tried the metaphors at work at this point. And guys have chimed in, too, saying they're tired of the sports talk and fully support switching it up," she said. As for what she hopes comes from her makeup metaphors, Ari explained, "I hope it sparks more awareness about how language can include or exclude, especially in a professional setting. Language should reflect a wider range of interests and identities." Well, I'm genuinely thinking about how I can insert these into my everyday life. What others can you think of? Let us know in the comments. Ari has since turned her viral 13-second skit into a small book collection of 50 makeup metaphor phrases, titled Touching Up. You can also keep up with Ari on TikTok and Instagram.

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