Click the image to see it at full size.
Author: Joey deVilla

If you’re running into setbacks and need a little inspiration, here’s one from comic book writer Tom King, who says this about the panels above: “Wanted to write this page since I was 9. Hope it inspires a picked-on kid, as the comics of my nerdy youth inspired me.”
The city of Tampa’s new Tampa Together video does feature a lot of Mayor Bob Buckhorn tooting his own horn*, but it also sings the praises of a city with a lot going for it, and a lot of potential. As I write this, it has a mere 796 views, and I think we can give it a lot more love.
* When a shameless self-promoter like me says someone’s tooting their own horn, that really means something. But hey, he’s a damn sight better than my last mayor!

The video also presents a lot of factoids about Tampa. I’m going to fact-check them and link to the sources, but in the meantime, here’s the list:
- Tampa led the state of Florida in job creation for 3 of the past 6 years.
- Forbes listed Tampa in its top 10 fastest growing cities list.
- Fortune says that Tampa is one of the hottest cities for startups.
- The Brookings Institution (a think tank that does research and education in the social sciences, primarily in economics, metropolitan policy, governance, foreign policy, and global economy, and development) calls the Tampa Bay area a top metro for growth, prosperity, and inclusion.
- Wallethub.com calls Tampa one of the most fun cities in the U.S., a top city for an active lifestyle, and a top ten place for veterans to live in.
- GoBankingRates.com says Tampa is a top ten place to invest in real estate.
- Tampa was home to the 2017 college football playoff national championship.
- The U.S. Conference of Mayors calls Tampa one of the nation’s fastest-growing economies.
- Commercial real estate lender Colliers International says Tampa is one of the hottest industrial markets in the country.
- Thrillist says that Tampa is one of the best cities for creatives to live in.
“I’m the best at what I do, and what I do isn’t very nice.”
Click the photo to see the badassery at full size.
Sure, Japan may be known for its wacky TV ads, but when it comes to poster advertising, nobody beats my homeland, the Philippines, where they know that copyright and trademark violation is your best entertainment value!
The marketing genius who designed this poster clearly knows the target audience is the parents, and not the person being circumcised, because that audience says “Wolverine? Cool!” and not “Keep Wolverine away from my ding-ding!”
In case you were wondering:
- The Dionisio M. Cornel Memorial Medical Center, for whom this ad was made, has a Facebook page. They have terrible reviews, and you may not want to get a circumcision done here.
- The medical center in question is in Antipolo, which is 26 kilometers (16 miles) east of Manila, and where my great-grandfather, American immigrant to the Philippines James O’Hara, lived.
- At the time of writing, 1,400 Philippine pesos is equivalent to US$27.90 or CAD$37.38.
- The bottom of the poster translates as: “Cheap, still with a doctor, still at a hospital…this is where you get painless circumcision!”
I wonder if someone’s sent this pic to Hugh Jackman. He’ll get a laugh out of it.
Thanks to David J. Greenbaum for the find!
Yeah, it’s not technically a “mechanical bull” since it’s people-powered, but you it’s the term a lot of people use for this kind of ride. I hereby declare the InflataBULL™ as the official pool toy of Florida.
It’s available online through Walmart.com for US$80.
Click the photo to see it at full size.
Thanks to Murray Anne Bowers for the find!

I’ve always believed that the best way to land a job is to have and use connections, but Andrew Bowen has taken it up (or down, depending on your point of view) to a whole new level.
Until recently, Bowen was a columnist for Arab News, an English-language daily newspaper based in Jeddah. He’s there as a participant in the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars’ Middle East Program, which is the sort of thing you do when you want to land a job in global policy wonkery.
Bowen’s pre-election anti-Trump stance
Bowen’s run with Arab News used to comprise a mere 13 columns (it’s now 10, for reasons that I’ll explain), and once upon a time, you would’ve been able to see a quick, complete change of heart about Donald Trump. Prior to the election, he said these things about Trump:
- “boorish and predatory in private as he is in public”
- “inability to control his temperament, repeated personal misjudgments, and boorish remarks”
- “has done more than any other presidential candidate in modern US political history to whip up xenophobia and anti-Muslim sentiments in the U.S.”
- “Trump has shown repeatedly a frank disregard for human decency and civility.”
- “His questionable business practices and ethics raise deep questions about the level of public corruption, which could up swell during his term in office. His authoritarian tendencies and proclivity to speak more so than listen makes Trump a man not often suited to the responsibilities of the presidency.”
He also predicted a Clinton victory, stating that as president, she would likely “get a lot more done…than Obama ever did.”
The quotes above link to Google cached copies of Bowen’s columns because they no longer appear in Arab News, and there’s an interesting story behind that.
Your honor, please strike these from the record…

As I wrote earlier, you don’t enroll in the Wilson Center just because you have an interest in international policy, but because you want to become a policy wonk. Bowen was aiming for a job with the U.S. State Department, and when Trump won, he changed his opinions about Orange Julius Caesar to match the prevailing political winds.
Concerned that they may interfere in his being “cleared” to join the State Department, Bowen asked Arab News to delete his columns where he was less than complimentary to Trump. Arab News’ original response to this weaselly, unprofessional request, was to publicly cancel his column in this article, which I’ve reproduced below (any emphasis is mine):
Arab News regrettably announces that it will discontinue publishing articles by US columnist Andrew Bowen.
The reason behind this decision is the columnist insisting that this newspaper deletes previous articles dating back prior to the recent US election where he was in favor of Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton.
Bowen, a visiting scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, has repeatedly requested the removal of these articles stating that this is needed for him “to be cleared” for what he claims to be a possible job with the new Donald Trump administration’s State Department.
Mr. Bowen also insinuated — verbally and in writing — that he will seek the support of influential friends and contacts to help remove the articles.
Arab News possesses all correspondence relating to this matter and its position is that such a request is unprofessional journalistically, particularly given that there were no factual errors or libelous comments that require a redaction or correction.
We wish Mr. Bowen the best of luck in his job application.
The article, while it existed, also linked to a complete archive of Bowen’s original 13 columns.
It pays to have friends in high places
Once again, I’m linking to a Google cached copy because the original article is gone, as are Bowen’s articles critical of Trump. If you try to go to any of those pages, here’s what you’ll see:

Apparently, calling on those “influential friends and contacts” did the trick. The lesson should be clear: Never underestimate the value of connections when you’re trying to land a new job.




