I enjoyed this video from one of my favorite websites. It's not quite as exciting as the Mr. Rogers segment about crayons from my youth- but cool nonetheless.
Hey, did you notice those workers weren't wearing hair nets? Maybe the little girl found a hair in her crayon and that is why she was staring at it so intently for so long. I mean, what would you do if you found a hair in your crayon?
jesse excitedly told me that he remembers watching that video as a kid. apparently, that's the kind of segment that sticks with you. you will most definitely need to share that with ambrose.
Yeah, me and Thomas remembered it as well- but I don't think it was the one I saw on Mr. Rogers- it might have been from Sesame Street... I don't know, could there be more than one crayon making video from the 70's?
Jessica- I noticed the workers weren't wearing hair nets, but I also noticed that they were all wearing smiles... maybe the two are directly related.
oh grammar slammer. i remember the mr. rogers one better, too. the most impressive thing to me about these busy waxy workers was their aprons. but maybe i'm just a little fixated right now.
I also thought about the hair nets, but then I thought maybe since it isn't food or anything people put on themselves or eat off of, then maybe you don't need to wear hair nets. I then started thinking about all the other products you could make without needing a hair net. At first I thought balloons, but that might cause a problem with the static electricity and then hair would get stuck to the balloons. I concluded that electronics, furniture, and cars are the only non-hair net factories. Oh and crayons!
so much to be said about this video-- first, get that little girl on montel--whoa psychic powers second, some of those folks looked a little old for factory work third, at least one lady knew she was being filmed, as indicated by her huge smile--either that or she LOVES working at the crayon, factory, i'd love it, i could watch that waxy orange all day, fourth--i thought the crayons were handled a little roughly, i always assumed they were more delicate (i broke a million crayons as a kid), but apparently they are as tough as stephanie's cervix,
which brings me to my final point:
YAYYYY Stephanie!!!!! You made it to you due date! And even if he's not born today, i feel like there's a special feeling in the air, like christmas. i'm so excited for ambrose.
I also wondered if the same people have to make the same color day in and day out. Like there is a red team, yellow team, green team, etc. Or does the same group make all the crayons, but just switches off every two days or so?
15 comments:
That was really one of the most interesting videos I have ever seen.
excellent
and she saw all of that on the tip of a crayon. wowsa.
Hey, did you notice those workers weren't wearing hair nets? Maybe the little girl found a hair in her crayon and that is why she was staring at it so intently for so long. I mean, what would you do if you found a hair in your crayon?
jesse excitedly told me that he remembers watching that video as a kid. apparently, that's the kind of segment that sticks with you. you will most definitely need to share that with ambrose.
Yeah, me and Thomas remembered it as well- but I don't think it was the one I saw on Mr. Rogers- it might have been from Sesame Street... I don't know, could there be more than one crayon making video from the 70's?
Jessica- I noticed the workers weren't wearing hair nets, but I also noticed that they were all wearing smiles... maybe the two are directly related.
My last comment is bugging me- I think I was supposed to write: "Thomas and I" . . . grrr.
oh grammar slammer. i remember the mr. rogers one better, too. the most impressive thing to me about these busy waxy workers was their aprons. but maybe i'm just a little fixated right now.
stephnie, b says, "i am waiting to see pictures of ambrose." ...you best tell him to hurry it up!
Trust me- I'm trying!
I also thought about the hair nets, but then I thought maybe since it isn't food or anything people put on themselves or eat off of, then maybe you don't need to wear hair nets. I then started thinking about all the other products you could make without needing a hair net. At first I thought balloons, but that might cause a problem with the static electricity and then hair would get stuck to the balloons. I concluded that electronics, furniture, and cars are the only non-hair net factories. Oh and crayons!
Do you have to wear a hair net while working in a wig factory?
so much to be said about this video--
first, get that little girl on montel--whoa psychic powers
second, some of those folks looked a little old for factory work
third, at least one lady knew she was being filmed, as indicated by her huge smile--either that or she LOVES working at the crayon, factory, i'd love it, i could watch that waxy orange all day,
fourth--i thought the crayons were handled a little roughly, i always assumed they were more delicate (i broke a million crayons as a kid), but apparently they are as tough as stephanie's cervix,
which brings me to my final point:
YAYYYY Stephanie!!!!! You made it to you due date! And even if he's not born today, i feel like there's a special feeling in the air, like christmas. i'm so excited for ambrose.
do my posts drive the grammar police KUHRAAAAAzzzzzzzYYYYY?
I also wondered if the same people have to make the same color day in and day out. Like there is a red team, yellow team, green team, etc. Or does the same group make all the crayons, but just switches off every two days or so?
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