TheToastIsBlue
TheToastIsBlue t1_j252vdc wrote
Reply to TIL that the narrative that Coca-Cola designed the modern Santa Claus as part of an advertising campaign is not true, because Coca-Cola did start using Santa in advertising in 1933. But Santa had been portrayed almost exclusively in red from the early 19th century by giuliomagnifico
People complain about the commodifying of Christmas all the time. I don't think a company would want to be the go-to example.
TheToastIsBlue t1_j252hmc wrote
Reply to comment by TheHeigendov in TIL that the narrative that Coca-Cola designed the modern Santa Claus as part of an advertising campaign is not true, because Coca-Cola did start using Santa in advertising in 1933. But Santa had been portrayed almost exclusively in red from the early 19th century by giuliomagnifico
> People complain about the commodifying of Christmas all the time. It's really not crazy to think a company wouldn't want to be the go-to example.
TheToastIsBlue t1_j25103i wrote
Reply to comment by agreeingstorm9 in TIL that the narrative that Coca-Cola designed the modern Santa Claus as part of an advertising campaign is not true, because Coca-Cola did start using Santa in advertising in 1933. But Santa had been portrayed almost exclusively in red from the early 19th century by giuliomagnifico
>Coke says they didn't invent Santa. You say we should not believe them when they say that.
What the FUUUUCK are you talking about? Who said they invented Santa clause?
>You say we should not believe them when they say that.
Where did I say that?
TheToastIsBlue t1_j25039m wrote
Reply to comment by TheHeigendov in TIL that the narrative that Coca-Cola designed the modern Santa Claus as part of an advertising campaign is not true, because Coca-Cola did start using Santa in advertising in 1933. But Santa had been portrayed almost exclusively in red from the early 19th century by giuliomagnifico
> Why would they have any reason to lie about creating santa clause?
People complain about the commodifying of Christmas all the time. It's really not crazy to think a company wouldn't want to be the go-to example.
(Also who the fuck said anything about "creating Santa clause")
TheToastIsBlue t1_j24ydje wrote
Reply to comment by agreeingstorm9 in TIL that the narrative that Coca-Cola designed the modern Santa Claus as part of an advertising campaign is not true, because Coca-Cola did start using Santa in advertising in 1933. But Santa had been portrayed almost exclusively in red from the early 19th century by giuliomagnifico
> You're saying that Coke did indeed invent the modern Santa Claus despite them saying they didn't. What evidence do you have to support this claim?
I'm not saying anything of the sort. It's offensive for you to put words in my mouth.
I'm asking if the above user is trying to suggest that the Coca-Cola corporations wouldn't lie.
TheToastIsBlue t1_j241kkp wrote
Reply to comment by croninsiglos in TIL that the narrative that Coca-Cola designed the modern Santa Claus as part of an advertising campaign is not true, because Coca-Cola did start using Santa in advertising in 1933. But Santa had been portrayed almost exclusively in red from the early 19th century by giuliomagnifico
Do you believe everything a corporation tells you?
TheToastIsBlue t1_j241hg8 wrote
Reply to comment by croninsiglos in TIL that the narrative that Coca-Cola designed the modern Santa Claus as part of an advertising campaign is not true, because Coca-Cola did start using Santa in advertising in 1933. But Santa had been portrayed almost exclusively in red from the early 19th century by giuliomagnifico
Are you suggesting they wouldn't?
TheToastIsBlue t1_j1zsbrh wrote
Reply to comment by TheToastIsBlue in An individual piece of a KitKat bar is called a “finger” by F-this
It doesn't sound right, but I don't know enough about jingles to dispute it.
TheToastIsBlue t1_j1zs2ea wrote
Give me a Break
Give me a break
Break me off a piecefinger of that kit-kat-bar!
TheToastIsBlue t1_j1l5iwb wrote
Reply to TIL the song "Buffalo Gals" sung by the future Mr. and Mrs. Bailey in "It's a Wonderful Life" is about the prostitutes of Buffalo, New York. by baby_blue_eyes
I remember practicing this song for our 4th grade musical and our teacher deciding Eric was going to sing it the day before the performance. Fuck you Eric.
TheToastIsBlue t1_j1dnd2h wrote
TheToastIsBlue t1_j1at51p wrote
Reply to TIL that Bromine is also used to sanitize pools as well as chlorine. Chlorinated pools tend to have a saltier "taste" by SociallyAwkward423
Is that the stuff from my Gatorade?
TheToastIsBlue t1_j0bbhrb wrote
Reply to comment by salton in TIL Europe's wine owes its existence to the grafting of vines to American grape root stock that weren't vulnerable to a species of aphid that was destined to wipe the industry out. by salton
Mad Salton: Beyond Thunderdome
TheToastIsBlue t1_ivzc3jz wrote
Reply to Scientists Taught an AI to ‘Sleep’ So That It Doesn't Forget What It Learned, Like a Person. Researchers say counting sleep may be the best way for AIs to exhibit life-long learning. by mossadnik
>Without sleep, humans can become forgetful, hallucinate, and even experience various physical and psychological problems. But new research published in the journal PLOS Computational Biology suggests that future AIs could benefit from getting some sleep too.
>Artificial neural networks often reach some superhuman heights, but when it comes to sequential learning, or learning one new thing after another, they become, well, kind of like Finding Nemo’s Dory. Unlike humans and animals who have the ability to learn and apply knowledge continuously, while these systems can certainly achieve excellence in a new task, it’s at the expense of the performance of a previous task. Once properly trained, it's very difficult to teach them a completely new task and if you succeed in training the new task, you end up damaging the old memory.
>In the neuro world, such an activity is called “catastrophic forgetting.” It’s an issue that can only be solved with something called “consolidation of memory,” a process that helps transform recent short-term memories into long-term ones, often occurring during REM sleep. This reorganization of memory might actually play a large part in why we need to sleep at all, especially as if the process does stop working, or is interrupted in some way, serious mental deficits can occur.
>To some, the concept is promising. As sleep is said to spike learning by enabling the “spontaneous reactivation of previously learned memory patterns,” the study notes that neuroscience-inspired artificial intelligence could actually be the next big thing. Building on previous work in memory plasticity and sleep modeling, the team used a neural network model to simulate sensory processing and reinforcement learning in an animal’s brain, and then gave it two separate tasks to complete. In both tasks, the network learned how to discriminate between being punished and being rewarded—enough so that eventually, it could make decisions on its own.
TheToastIsBlue t1_iu1vq2v wrote
Reply to comment by HeDgEhAwG69 in TIL Dry cleaning isn't dry at all and is only called dry because it uses chemical solvents instead of water by balaclavaloungeparty
Dry cleaning. Apparently my neighborhood can thank our drycleaners for our toxic groundwater.
TheToastIsBlue t1_j6nbq66 wrote
Reply to comment by OptimusSublime in My Reign energy drink has a Monster tab by Cheffk4
What I found shocking was that Monster was created by the Hansen company that had all the "natural" sodas.