Archive for Holidays

Halloween 2019

NASA’s Hubble space telescope has discovered this haunting specter with glowing eyes glaring at us from deep space for Halloween.

Halloween 2019

 

Space.com explains that the halloween visitor is. The piercing “eyes” of this creepy space face are two distant galaxies in the middle of a head-on collision. A ring of young blue stars contours the shape of the eerie face. The dense clumps of stars have come together to form its nose and mouth.

This galaxy merger is known as Arp-Madore 2026-424. The designation combines the names of the two astronomers that first documented it. Arp-Madore 2026-424 is about 704 million light-years away from Earth in the constellation Microscopium.

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Are You Middle Class This Labor Day

Are You Middle Class This Labor Day

It is Labor Day in the U.S. Organized labor created the U.S. middle class. Now the middle class is being squeezed out of existence. Considerable reports that the Pew Research Center has concluded that 52% of Americans qualify as middle class. 29% in lower-income households and 19% in upper-income households.

Middle class squeezeThe researchers found that today, roughly half of American households fall into the middle class, over time the middle class has been shrinking. In 1971, 61% of adults lived in middle-class households. During this time both upper and lower-income segments of the population have been growing at the expense of the middle class. Plus, the upper class has seen bigger income gains, widening the income gap.

Pew found that the highest concentrations of middle-class Americans reside in the Midwest and Northeast. Sheboygan, WI has the largest percentage of middle-class adults in the U.S., others are:

  1. Sheboygan, WI – 65.2%
  2. Elkhart-Goshen, IN – 64.4%
  3. East Stroudsburg, PA – 63.7%
  4. Ogden-Clearfield, UT – 63.1%

The areas with the highest concentration of upper-class households should not surprise anyone.

  1. San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara, CA – 31.6%
  2. Washington-Arlington-Alexandria, DC-VA-MD-WV – 30.6%
  3. San Francisco-Oakland-Hayward, CA – 30.4%
  4. Bridgeport-Stamford-Norwalk, CT – 30.2%

The national average middle-class household income is $78,442 according to the Pew data. The Michigan middle-class benchmark is just over $79,000 and is placed in the middle at the 27th place nationally, between New Mexico and Maine. The Michigan middle-class household earns on average $600 more than the national average.

As for metro regions, the highest income to be middle class in the U.S. belongs to:

  1. Iowa City, IA  $90,158
  2. Auburn-Opelika, AL $87,363
  3. Monroe, MI $87,330
  4. Washington-Arlington-Alexandria, DC-VA-MD-WV  $86,645

Being middle class requires the least income in:

  1. El Centro, CA $69,338
  2. Merced, CA $71,319
  3. Lewiston-Auburn, ME $71,612
  4. Coeur d’Alene, ID $71,726

The Pew data says that in order to be middle class in Michigan the major metro-areas a household needs to have the following incomes.

  1. Muskegon, MI $76,699
  2. Saginaw, MI $77,731
  3. Lansing-East Lansing, MI $79,522
  4. Detroit-Warren-Dearborn, MI $80,159
  5. Grand Rapids-Wyoming, MI $80,166
  6. Niles-Benton Harbor, MI $80,302
  7. Ann Arbor, MI $80,907
  8. Kalamazoo-Portage, MI $81,003
  9. Jackson, MI $81,710
  10. Monroe, MI $87,330

In the table below, you’ll find the median incomes for each U.S. state for a three-person middle-class household, adjusted for the cost of living in the states. The amounts vary because Pew adjusts the data to reflect the cost of living around the country. Keep in mind the this is based on 2016 income, but since inflation has been modest in recent years the exact number probably won’t have changed much.

 

How much income it takes to be middle class

RankStateIncome
1District of Columbia$88,579
2Rhode Island$84,413
3Maryland$84,372
4Alaska$84,015
5Massachusetts$83,923
6North Dakota$83,494
7Connecticut$82,747
8Minnesota$82,173
9New Jersey$81,950
10South Dakota$81,334
11Virginia$81,309
12Colorado$81,234
13Iowa$81,167
14Wisconsin$81,053
15Illinois$81,010
16New Hampshire$80,656
17Washington$80,615
18Wyoming$80,217
19Hawaii$80,168
20Ohio$80,033
21Delaware$79,959
22Pennsylvania$79,717
23Nebraska$79,549
24Kentucky$79,216
25Missouri$79,189
26Maine$79,060
27Michigan$79,042
28New Mexico$79,012
29Kansas$78,971
30Georgia$78,961
31Vermont$78,877
32Texas$78,866
33Montana$78,854
34Alabama$78,624
35North Carolina$78,624
36Oregon$78,550
37Nevada$78,461
38New York$78,412
39South Carolina$78,016
40Indiana$77,941
41California$77,806
42Oklahoma$77,658
43Utah$77,575
44Tennessee$77,495
45Louisiana$77,351
46Arizona$76,860
47Idaho$76,849
48Mississippi$76,666
49West Virginia$76,629
50Arkansas$76,569
51Florida$75,414
In 2016 dollars, reflects three-person household, and adjusted for cost of living in the states. Source: Pew Research Center analysis of 2016 American Community Survey (IPUMS)

 

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Fourth of July

Celebrate your independence any way you can ...
Fourth of July 2019

Jaimie Berg, who also goes by her stage name Ms. B Hooping Allure, hula-hoops to live music at the 2017 Haggen Fourth of July festivities.

 

H/T Bellingham Herald

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Happy New Year 2019

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here. 

Stories From A Christmas Story

Stories From A Christmas StoryThe 1983 classic holiday movie A Christmas Story, has been with us for 35 years. If you have lived under a rock for the last 35 years, the movie is based on the Jean Shepherd story In God We Trust: All Others Pay Cash which chronicles Ralphies quest for a Daisy Red Ryder BB gun  Here are some little known facts about the holiday classic movie.

A Christmas StoryThe 24-hour marathon began as a stunt. Thanks to Ted Turner holiday revelers can see Ralphie a.k.a. Peter Billingsley, as many times as they want on TBS. The 24-hour Christmas Day marathon of A Christmas Story is probably dreaded by as many people s those who enjoy it. TNT rolled out the first marathon in 1988 as a stunt and it became a recurring holiday tradition in 1997.

Ralphie really wants a Red Ryder BB Gun. Ralphie says he wants the a Red Ryder BB Gun 28 times throughout the course of the movie. Mental Floss calculates that’s about once every three minutes and 20 seconds.

official Red Ryder carbine action, 200-shot, range model air rifle with a compass in the stock and this thing that tells timeYou can still buy a Red Ryder BB Gun. The real Red Ryder BB Gun was first made in 1938 and was named after a popular newspaper comic strip. You can still buy Red Ryder BB Gun for the low price of $29.98. The original wasn’t quite the same as the one in the movie. The “official Red Ryder carbine-action, 200-shot, range model air rifle with a compass in the stock and this thing that tells time” did not have Ralphie’s compass in the stock, or “this thing which tells time” that both the Jean Shepherd story and the movie call for.

Daisy introduced the Red Ryder BB gun, named after the comic strip cowboy Red Ryder., and it sold for $2.95. It did not have a compass or a sundial. That was the Buck Jones model, named for a popular Western movie star of the 1920s, ‘30s, and ‘40s. Special versions of the “official Red Ryder carbine-action, 200-shot, range model air rifle with a compass in the stock and this thing that tells time” had to be made just for A Christmas Story.

Dasiy Red Ryder BB Gun adThe Daisy BB gun started in Michigan. The Plymouth Windmill Company of Plymouth Michigan began giving away BB guns as a gift for buying a windmill. Declining sales of windmills forced the business to convert to making only BB guns. In 1895 the company changed its name to Daisy Manufacturing Company, Inc. When World War II began, Daisy stopped making the air guns for several years. Production resumed in 1946 and a few years later the company was selling more than 1 million BB guns annually. Daisy relocated from Michigan to Arkansas in 1958.

Flick’s tongue wasn’t actually frozen to that flagpole. If you triple dog dare your best friend to stick his tongue stuck on a piece of cold metal it will stick. Mythbusters proved it was possible to get your tongue truly stuck on a piece of cold metal. But Flick’s tongue wasn’t actually stuck on the icy pole. The producers used a hidden suction tube to safely create the illusion.

triple dog dare your best friendFrageelee—it must be Italian. The author of the book saw an advertisement for Nehi orange soda featuring a woman’s leg and used it as an inspiration for creating the “major award.” The producers had three leg lamps created for the movie. All three copies of the leg lamp that the Old Man loves so much were broken during filming.

Just a kid. The boy in the goggles who’s waiting next to Ralphie to see Santa is not an actor. He was a real kid in the department store, and director Bob Clark decided to put him in the scene because he looked odd.

FrageeleeSanta’s Revenge. Author Shepherd loathed A Christmas Story’s generic, apple-pie title. He told the NY Post,

“I fought it all the way down the line … It was based on a story called ‘Red Ryder Nails the Cleveland Street Kid’ and I could accept that was too long for a marquee. My original title was ‘Santa’s Revenge.’

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Happy Viewing and Merry Christmas

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.