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Not only was I amazed to see robotic VP trying to be human, I was astonished that the song is still known. I opted out of all pop music back about the time I was a teen ager and my farmer father especially enjoyed listening to me play "Blueberry Hill" on the piano. That was over 50 years ago. How could that inane little ditty still be known and sung at a Moscow social function? I guess it's been repopularized by someone in the meantime. Can't imagine why. I would expect "Mule Train" would be more popular. But what do I know? Obviously next to nothing.
At times I get the impression You Tube is a treasure trove second only to Google. I've been hearing people speak of hearing poets read and opera singers sing on You Tube, as well as on Google. Having become a moderate user of the Internet, I am now often surprised when I find others of my contemporaries who don't think of it as resource. I may not see a need for a cell phone, but I'm not a total Luddite.
2 comments:
June -- Your remark about your contemporaries not thinking about the internet as a resource is a familiar one I also hear. In fact, some treat it as a distasteful activity. As Tess Kincaid of Willow Manor said of some of her friends -- it is like a dead fish if she mentions it. I feel the internet offers a wide variety of world knowledge to everyone. -- barbara
I admit it took a woman my own age to convince me that I could find answers to many questions on the Internet. But there's no stopping me now although I sometimes go frustrated not knowing the wording for some searches, so I stumble about blindly for a while.
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