Copyright © 2015 Jim Sizemore.
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bars, buddies, business, couples, dating, domestic conflict, family, friends, gag cartoons, gags, love, marriage, relationships, singles, singles bars | Tagged: business, business as usual, couples, dating, domestic conflict, family, gag cartoons, gags, love, marriage, relationships, Today's Gag |
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For awhile now the Metropolitan Regional Council of Carpenters has unfurled an attractive—and very bold—banner to respectively protest some of the hiring practices of Under Armour. You can see the banner most work-day mornings at the company’s global headquarters on Key Highway Extended, in Locust Point. While you’re there, you may want to have a chat with the workers, and pick up one of the flyers with more details about the disbute. Or, you can simply click on the copy of the flyer at the end of this post; it’s well-designed, very short, and to the point.
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(Click flyer and photos to enlarge.)
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business, business as usual, business ethics, C.E.O., class conflict, clothes, co-workers, competition, conflict, construction, corporate culture, education, greed, human resources, jobs, labor, labor relations, signs, Under Armour, Wall Street, work relations | Tagged: Baltimore, business, business as usual, corporate culture, employment, greed, Maryland, money, photography, pictures, Wall Street |
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advice, animals, buddies, business as usual, canine, comic strip, competition, conflict, dogs, domestic conflict, family, friendship, girls, kids, love, relationships | Tagged: animals, business as usual, domestic conflict, family, kids, love, monk & mandi, relationships |
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animals, buddies, canine, comic strip, conflict, domestic conflict, friends, kids, relationships, sports, trained animals | Tagged: animals, dogs, domestic conflict, family, kids, love, monk & mandi, relationships, sports, thrills |
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By David Mamet
“The main question in drama, the way I was taught, is always what does the protagonist want. . . . Do we see the protagonist’s wishes fulfilled or absolutely frustrated? That’s the structure of drama. . . . People only speak to get something. . . . They may use a language that seems revealing, but if so, it’s just coincidence, because what they’re trying to do is accomplish an objective.”
From the Hilton Als commentary, “True Lies”
The New Yorker, June 29, 2015
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acting, actors, advice, audience, characters, domestic conflict, drama, fiction, playwriting, quotes, relationships, theater, writing | Tagged: domestic conflict, drama, family, love, marriage, playwriting, quotes, relationships, theater, writing |
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