Thursday, October 17, 2024

Don’t give either a knockout presentation or a killer presentation

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Why not? Because an unconscious or dead audience can’t take anything away. Please avoid overblown language.

 

I found an article at American Express on September 18, 2023 by Bruna Martinuzzi titled How to Structure a Knockout Presentation. There is another article at Black Enterprise on August 2, 2024 titled Give a Knockout Presentation That Leaves Your Audience Impressed. Back on September 24, 2011 I blogged about Should you give a knockout eulogy?

 

There also was yet another article at George Brown College on May 17, 2024 titled How to make a killer presentation. And there is a post at the Benjamin Ball Associates blog on January 5, 2024 titled How to give a killer presentation. Another post at the Garr Reynolds blog on August 20, 2024 is titled 13 Ways to Make a Killer Online Presentation. There is still another post at the Poll Everywhere Blog on October 1, 2024 titled 10 Tips for a killer presentation that won’t bore your audience.

 

An image of a knockout was modified from one at the Library of Congress. An image of a man pointing a revolver came from Wikimedia Commons.

 


Tuesday, October 15, 2024

American Table: The foods, people, and innovations that feed us (from the Smithsonian) is a fascinating book on foods

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I recently found a fascinating 2023 book at the Meridian Public Library from the Smithsonian by Lisa Kingsley titled American Table: The foods, people, and innovations that feed us. If you were looking for speech topics about food, then this is an excellent place to start. Beginning on page 27 there is a section titled THE UNITED EATS OF AMERICA with the following divisions and state foods. There is no preview at Google Books, so I am providing links, mostly to Wikipedia pages, for these forty regional foods:

 

NEW ENGLAND AND THE MID-ATLANTIC

Connecticut: Steamed cheeseburger

Delaware: Scrapple

Maryland: Crab cakes

Massachusetts: The Fluffernutter

New Hampshire: Grape Nuts ice cream

New Jersey: Pork roll, eggs, and cheese sandwich

New York: New York-style pizza

Pennsylvania: Pepper pot soup

Rhode Island: Hot wieners with coffee milk

Vermont: Maple creemee

 

THE SOUTH

Georgia: Boiled peanuts

Louisiana: Crawfish etouffee

Arkansas: Chocolate gravy on biscuits

Mississippi: Delta-style hot tamales

 

THE SOUTHEAST

North Carolina: Vinegar-sauced BBQ pork

Tennessee: Meat and three

Florida: Cuban sandwich

Virginia: Ham biscuits

West Virginia: Pepperoni rolls

 

THE MIDWEST

Illinois: Italian beef

Indiana: Sugar cream pie

Iowa: Loose-meat sandwich

Kansas: Chili and cinnamon rolls

Missouri: St. Paul sandwich

Nebraska: Bierocks (Runza)

Ohio: Cincinnati chili

North Dakota: Knoephla [soup]

Oklahoma: Fried-onion burger

South Dakota: Chislic

Wisconsin: Friday night fish fry

 

THE SOUTHWEST

Arizona: Navaho tacos/fry bread

Texas: Viet-Cajun boil

 

THE MOUNTAIN WEST

Colorado: Rocky Mountain oysters

Nevada: Prime rib

Idaho: Basque croquetas

Utah: Funeral potatoes

Wyoming: Trout

 

THE FAR WEST AND PACIFIC

Alaska: Reindeer dogs

Hawaii: Spam musubi

Washington: Geoduck

 

Some of the Wikipedia pages are rather sketchy compared with those in this book, like that for Idaho’s Basque croquetas:

 

“….The state is now home to the largest population of Basques outside the Basque Country. That community has a tremendous impact on the culture of Idaho’s largest city, Boise, where at restaurants, bars, markets, and numerous festivals, Boiseans enjoy the tradition of pinxtos (PEEN-chos), or Basque tapas. Some of the most popular include tortilla, a quiche-like omelot of potatoes, onions and pimento peppers; bocadillos, a selection of mini sandwiches; and perhaps the best-loved one of all, croquetas, breaded and fried morsels that have thick and creamy fillings such as chicken and cheese with piquillo peppers, or bechamel combined with salt cod or chopped Iberico or Serrano ham. While similar in form to classic French croquettes, which are potato-based, classic Basque croquetas rely on a thick white sauce to form small balls or cylinders that are rolled in bread crumbs and deep fried. The resultant bites – a hot and crispy exterior that yields to a rich, creamy, flavorful center – are irresistible.”

 

The description for: Knoephla (North Dakota) begins:

 

“The story of North Dakota’s knoephla soup has a through line that connects it to that of Nebraska’s runza – the immigration of Germans to Russia during the 18 th century and their subsequent immigration to the Midwest in the late 19 th century. Knoephla soup, eaten all over the state and almost nowhere else, is a creamy chicken soup made with celery, carrots, potatoes, milk, and dumplings called knoephla, from the German knoepfle, meaning ‘little knobs’ or ‘little buttons.’ The German element in this comfort-food soup is the dumplings, which are similar to spaetzle – chewy noodles made with flour, salt, water, and eggs – but the other components were likely borrowed from other cultures over time.”

 

And the description for chislic (South Dakota) says:

 

“Cooked meat on a stick is certainly not a novel concept, but a certain type of cooked meat on a stick is uniques in America to South Dakota – and like Nebraska’s runza and North Dakota’s knoephla soup, has its roots in the food of German immigeants who came to the state from Russia in the late 19 th century. Chislic, simply put, is cubes of meat – traditionally lamb or mutton but sometimes beef – that are deep-fried, seasoned with garlic salt, and served on skewers with saltine crackers. Chislic is likely an anglicization of the Turkic word shaslik, referring to something on a skewer. (‘Shish,’ as in shish kebabs, means skewer). According to Marnette Honer, executive director and archivist at the Heritage Hall Museum & Archives in Freeman, Soth Dakota, chislic was introduced to southeastern South Dakota by Johann Hoellwarth, who came to Dakota Territory from Crimea sometime in the 1870s. With very few trees available on the plains from which to obtain wood for grilling the meat – as was the traditional way Tatar cooks in Russia prepared it – South Dakota cooks fried the cubes of meat in the tallow of the sheep they butchered. While in Russia the meat was marinated in onions and other seasonings for hours, in America garlic salt came to be used. Saltine crackers supplanted the flatbread. From Freeman , chislic spread in a circle of about 30 miles surrounding the town, often referred to as the ‘Chislic Circle,’ though today it is served at bars and restaurants throughout the state.”  

 

Spiedies are grilled meat cubes that are similar to chislic.

 

The image for knoephla soup was captioned from one at Wikimedia Commons.

 

 


Sunday, October 13, 2024

Chopping a number down to size by using the right unit conversion


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

On October 7, 2024 there is an article by Sally Krutzig at the Idaho Statesman titled Half of Boise Foothills wildfire contained as blaze reaches nearly 10,000 acres. It said the fire then covered an area of 9,892 acres. Those units are how our federal government reports fires, like on theirInciWeb site.

 

I think most people have difficulty visualizing a large number like 10,000. But we can chop it down. The Wikipedia article on an Acre says a square mile is 640 acres. That 9,892 acres converts to just 15.46 square miles. That’s a bit more than a 3 mile by 5 mile rectangle. And the much larger Lava fire west of Lake Cascade covers 97,585 acres or 152.5 square miles – corresponding to slightly more than a 10 mile by 15 mile rectangle.

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

What about even larger areas? Most of the country can think by comparison with the land area for our smallest state of Rhode Island (shown above on a U. S. map) - 1,034 square miles. Here in Idaho we could report it in terms of the land area for Ada County – a similar 1053 square miles.

 

Back on July 12, 2016 I blogged about How to make statistics understandable.

 

The cartoon man with an axe was adapted from this image at Openclipart.

 


Friday, October 11, 2024

A book on creativity from Grant Snider - profusely illustrated by comics

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Via interlibrary loan (from the Boise Public Library) I obtained and am extremely enjoying reading a thoughtful 2017 book with comics by Grant Snider titled The Shape of Ideas: An illustrated exploration of creativity. Grant is an orthodontist and an artist. He has a web site called Incidental Comics. The book cover has a hole shaped like a light bulb. And the book has ten sections with the following titles: 

 

INSPIRATION [Page 9]

PERSPIRATION [Page 22]

IMPROVISATION [Page 36]

ASPIRATION [Page 50]

CONTEMPLATION [Page 68]

EXPLORATION [Page 88]

DAILY FRUSTRATION [Page 102]

IMITATION [Page 114]

DESPERATION [Page 128]

PURE ELATION [Page 138]

 

Here are links to a dozen comics appearing in the book, as presented on web pages at his Incidental Comics site:

 

The perfect idea [page 12]

How to get ideas [page 23]

Mind game [page 47]

Paths to success [page 54]

A place for ideas [page 77]

Outside the box [pages 90 and 91]

Apartment living [page 96]

Creative blocks [page 105]

The art of living [page 119] also the title for his 2022 book

Chasing happiness [page 133]

My biggest fears [page 134]

Creative thinking [page 136 and 137]

 

His list for My Greatest Fears has the following fifteen, but public speaking isn’t one of them:

 

Dead birds

My student loan debt

The soul-stealing moon

Insomnia

Large Dogs

Blood cults

Cynicism

Heights

Hyperintelligent post-human dwarves

Taking the wrong bus

Unintentional plagiarism

Disembodied floating skulls

Hantavirus

Failure

Feral wolf-children

 

On September 19, 2024 I blogged about his 2022 book in a post titled A manifesto on what you should pay attention to – from a book on The Art of Living profusely illustrated by comic strips. And on September 28, 2024 I blogged about how In 2020 Grant Snider published a profusely illustrated book – I Will Judge You By Your Bookshelf.

 

My big idea lightbulb was adapted from this image at Openclipart.

 


Wednesday, October 9, 2024

A thoughtful comic by Grant Snider on finding your voice

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

At his Incidental Comics web site there is a thoughtful comic by Grant Snider on September 2, 2016 titled Finding Your Voice. There are sixteen panels, titled as follows:

 

Speak softly.

Carry a big megaphone.

Speak reasonably.

But stay open to nonsense.

Speak uniquely.

Find your own voice.

Speak confidently.

Beware the echoes of self-doubt.

Speak simply.

Words are easily twisted.

Speak passionately.

Let your words be illuminated.

Speak moderately.

Don’t get drunk off the sound of your voice.

Speak your mind.

Then listen.

 

The same comic also appears on pages 62 and 63 of his 2017 book The Shape of Ideas: an illustrated exploration of creativity. On September 28, 2024 I blogged about how In 2020 Grant Snider published a profusely illustrated book – I Will Judge You By Your Bookshelf.

 

My cartoon was adapted from one at Openclipart.

 


Tuesday, October 8, 2024

Coal production in the United Kingdom was like having removed and burned a three-inch layer of material from the entire area

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Randall Munroe’s xkcd web comic on September 30, 2024 is titled UK Coal. He turns the total coal production of 25 billion tonnes into having removed a three-inch layer of material from the entire land area. That’s an excellent example of What’s In It For Me (WIIFM) – turning a gigantic number inro something you can picture. On July 12, 2016 I blogged about How to make statistics understandable. But on February 7, 2023 I also blogged about An xkcd comic on a size comparison that is unhelpful.

 

The Explain xkcd page discusses how the coal is not evenly distributed. Consider that a seam might be 60 inches thick – twenty times the average. Then subsidence after mining can be a significant problem. There is a web page at GOV.UK titled Coal mining subsidence damage – a guide to your rights.

 


Sunday, October 6, 2024

How will you celebrate Halloween this year?

 



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Back on March 20, 2018 I blogged about finding Speech topics from around your neighborhood. Yesterday I walked down West Estrella Drive and saw the front yard shown above. That’s quite a display of skeletons. It might scare some children.

 

There is an article by Christin Perry at Parents on September 20, 2024 titled How Parents Can Help Children Overcome Their Fear of Halloween.

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I was thinking about how we used to celebrate Halloween. I would tape the felt pumpkin shown above in the window next to the front door to indicate we expected children going around for trick or treat. We would prepare by getting a 30-pack of assorted full-size candy bars from Costco. We quit doing that when COVID-19 hit.