The problem with Sinbad was the NOT subtle CGI animation. It was like watching two movies mashed together and visually it didn't work. Dreamworks should have learned not that traditional animation is bad, but being lazy with it IS. They should have gone all-traditional animation, it would have been much much better to look at.
Wish I could go live in Sweden, but I'm not a permanent resident there. Maybe I could be a criminal there instead. Do the criminals get paid for sick days, too?
They got some cute ladycops in New Zealand. Unfortunately, I'm not a permanent resident. Maybe I could be a criminal instead. Do they have to be permanent residents?
Hint #4 is a bit confusing. It should say "The green house is IMMEDIATELY to the left of the white house." I was stuck until I saw how they interpreted "on the left".
We don't get paid for the first day. The following days we get paid 80% of normal (unless we have extra insurance); staying home with sick small kids gives money from and including the first day though.
In many jobs it's also ok to work from home now and then for various reasons including stuff like "I'm waiting for a package from UPS" or "I'm watching the handyman redecorating my livingroom". It's pretty relaxed.
I find screen real estate much more precious on my phone that computer, so bad framing is much more obvious on the phone. Whether because of vertical video syndrome or letterboxed horizontal video, the horizontal action ends up small on a vertical phone. At least in the latter case one has the option of turning their phone without trying to reframe it via zoom.
I work in a plasma center. That plasma is used to make dozens of medications and therapies for people with compromised immune systems. Plasma is usually a clear, straw-colored liquid. However, every so often, someone comes in and their plasma looks like cream of chicken soup. The term for that is "lipemic plasma." What is going on, is the person has consumed a large amount of saturated fats. Those saturated fats are the kind that can be solid at room temperature. Butter, heavy cream, lard, cheese, bacon, sausage, ham, and so forth, contain fats that can float along in the blood stream. It is especially obvious when the red cells are separated (usually by a centrifuge) I suspect those fats are part of what makes people drowsy after Thanksgiving dinner. For several hours, their blood has been turned to a fatty sludge. Blaming the tryptophan in turkey makes little sense. Turkey has slightly more than beef 0.24 g per 100 g of food. Beef has 0.23g. Cheddar cheese has more than Turkey 0.32g.
I was stuck until I saw how they interpreted "on the left".
No wonder everyone loves Jaelyn's mac n cheese, there's an 8th of a gram of coke in it.
In many jobs it's also ok to work from home now and then for various reasons including stuff like "I'm waiting for a package from UPS" or "I'm watching the handyman redecorating my livingroom". It's pretty relaxed.
/Sweden
Plasma is usually a clear, straw-colored liquid. However, every so often, someone comes in and their plasma looks like cream of chicken soup. The term for that is "lipemic plasma." What is going on, is the person has consumed a large amount of saturated fats.
Those saturated fats are the kind that can be solid at room temperature. Butter, heavy cream, lard, cheese, bacon, sausage, ham, and so forth, contain fats that can float along in the blood stream. It is especially obvious when the red cells are separated (usually by a centrifuge) I suspect those fats are part of what makes people drowsy after Thanksgiving dinner. For several hours, their blood has been turned to a fatty sludge.
Blaming the tryptophan in turkey makes little sense. Turkey has slightly more than beef 0.24 g per 100 g of food. Beef has 0.23g. Cheddar cheese has more than Turkey 0.32g.