[In just 40 seconds, Matthew McConaughey makes the heartbreaking case for gun safety]( Maite Rodriguez was only 10 years old when she was senselessly murdered during the mass school shooting in Uvalde, Texas, that made national headlines last month. The Robb Elementary School student was passionate about nature. So much so that every day she wore the same pair of green Converse shoes with a tiny heart etched in ink on the toe of the right shoe. Those now iconic shoes were the only reliable piece of evidence in identifying her body after Rodriguez was gunned down by the AR-15 style rifle that killed her and 18 of her fellow classmates. Actor Matthew McConaughey used that horrifying and unforgettable image during an appearance at the White House, where he advocated for gun safety measures in light of the shooting that has rocked his home town of Uvalde and the nation at large. McConaughey's remarks immediately went viral across social media, with a short, 40-second clip amassing more than 7 million views in less than 24 hours.
[Parents who grew up in the '70s and '80s remember the experiences that blow their kids' minds]( Parents, do you think your child would be able to survive if they were transported back to the '70s or '80s? Could they live at a time before the digital revolution put a huge chunk of our lives online? These days, everyone has a phone in their pocket, but before then, if you were in public and needed to call someone, you used a pay phone. Can you remember the last time you stuck 50 cents into one and grabbed the grubby handset? According to the U.S. Federal Communications Commission, roughly 100,000 pay phones remain in the U.S., down from 2 million in 1999. Do you think a 10-year-old kid would have any idea how to use a payphone in 2022? Would they be able to use a Thomas Guide map to find out how to get somewhere? If they stepped into a time warp and wound up in 1975, could they throw a Led Zeppelin album on the record player at a party? Another big difference between now and life in the '70s and '80s has been public attitudes toward smoking cigarettes. In 1965, 42.4% of Americans smoked and now, itâs just 12.5%. This sea change in public opinion about smoking means there are fewer places where smoking is deemed acceptable. But in the early '80s, you could smoke on a bus, on a plane, in a movie theater, in restaurants, in the classroom and even in hospitals. How would a child of today react if their third grade teacher lit up a heater in the middle of math class? Dan Wuori, senior director of early learning at the Hunt Institute, tweeted that his high school had a smoking area âfor the kids.â He then asked his followers to share âsomething you experienced as a kid that would blow your childrenâs minds.â
[eXXpedition sailing crews set out to tackle ocean plastic. Here's how we can all get on board.]( What do sailing and STEM fields have in common? For one, both have traditionally beenâand largely still areâthe domain of men. Sailing is a male-dominated sport, with women making up 16% of all competitors and only 5% of professional competitors in regattas last year. And though women have made big strides in STEM, progress has been uneven and women are still underrepresented in certain fields, including environmental science. Such underrepresentation is one reason the founders of eXXpedition gather all-female sailing crews with diverse areas of expertise to research ocean plastic pollution. Since 2014, the nonprofit organization has been on a mission to âmake the unseen, seenââthe unseen being women in sailing and science, the plastics and toxins polluting our oceans, and the diverse solutions to the problem.
[Jimmy Fallon asked people to share funny, weird or embarrassing stories from their bad summer jobs]( Call it a rite of passage, a baptism by fire, or simply a necessary evil, but a terrible summer job is pretty much a staple of young adulthood. Those concert tickets arenât gonna pay for themselves, after all. Some summer jobs are heinous by the sheer amount of manual labor involved. Others are just plain weird. I remember one year working as a âlive strolling table.â Yep, just walking around attached to an elaborately dressed table offering hors d'oeuvres and champagne. A human-furniture hybrid. How do you put that on a resume? No matter the role, there is one thing all summer jobs have in common: They teach us humility in one way or another ⦠especially once we see that first paycheck. Thereâs simply no way to prepare for seeing two weeks worth of hard work equate to a (usually) paltry sum. Hopefully that experience alone makes generous tippers of us all. Jimmy Fallon recently asked people to share their own âfunny, weird, or embarrassing story about a bad summer jobâ as part of his iconic #hashtags challenge. Here are 15 that might make your own summer job memory feel a little less dreadful.
[Here's how 18 people got over being homophobic, proving there's hope for everyone]( There are many different reasons why some people are homophobic. A lot of them are raised in religious households where homosexuality is seen as sinful and they never get over their indoctrination. A study from 2018 found that people who foster homophobic attitudes are less intelligent than those who accept people regardless of their sexuality. For the study, researchers asked subjects if they agree or disagree with the following statement: âHomosexual couples should have the same rights as heterosexual couples do.â After comparing data sets, researchers found that the lower a person's cognitive intelligence, the more likely they are to be homophobic. An older study from 2016 using an eye-tracking device found that some homophobic men seem to have an impulsive, automatic attraction to other men. Homophobic attitudes are more prevalent in people with authoritarian personality types. Authoritarians have âsubmissive attitudes toward strong leaders, a desire to punish all who violate conventional moral codes, and strong fear that conventional morality is breaking down.â Find us on the World Wide Web: [Facebook]( [Instagram]( [Twitter]( [Website]( [LinkedIn]( Copyright © 2022 GOOD | Upworthy, All rights reserved.
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