Before he became "rich and famous," he grew up--mostly--in Texas. He would spend his time dreaming about space and working in a field of exploration. It had him ecstatic to pursue an education at Princeton, as well as a member of the University's most prestigious groups. He changed his major to computer science to have "no regrets when he is 80," and soon saw potential in starting an online book store. Books built a great foundation for the company, and do society in general--the growth of knowledge of the past. He had timed the company perfect, having to educate people what the Internet was and what it could become. Change starts before others see what you have been working on, worrying about, and hoping it will work. Jeff's long term thinking has helped the company to focus of what is coming rather than what's happening.
"Dressing up" is something that is seen as showing you "have your life in line." A nice tailored suit shows you have good taste, take care of yourself, and respecting others by dressing up when meeting them. Jeff's style has changed a lot, and I keep seeing this meme. From a nerd--wearing khaki pants and turtle necks; to a fit-jacked figure--wearing well-fitted suits, jeans, and slacks. Even the most well put together make mistake. All the money one can imagine, yet, his tie is all twisted up for a picture.
"Oh, boy." Only if there was a product that could discreetly keep the tie inline. Wouldn't that be nice? Something that snaps in place and is worry-free throughout the day, keeping the tie centered and secured.
It's about conspiracies the Government is experimenting with children in the womb to go give them "superpowers." Wouldn't that be cool?
The show pulls our emotional stings, reminding us back when we were a kid and using our imagination to create our own horror stories. In a small, quiet town where people just wanted to get away from everything. Most show based is towns like this have more drama than the big cities, it seems. Everyone knows everyone and everything, so there's always dirt to uncover.
In Season 3 near the end, the head investigator steps out of the helicopter into a windy mysterious scene. However, his tie wasn't flopping over he shoulder like you think it would. He had a tie clasp of some sort. It kept his tie down and out of the way, or any need to pull it back down just for it to fly up again. If your a man of power you want to use your time working on the task at hand, not handling your tie. Your tie should be front and center like your attention, worrying if the upside-down bridge is closed, the kids safe and the mind flayer is dead.
Thanks Netflix for the free awareness for my idea! I heard from a friend, "We had something like that back in the late 80s." Here's proof, a cool invisible way to keep your tie in uniform appearance. However, I want to know why they aren't used today? Is it a government secret?
The world that John Wick lives in is incredibly crafted; full of codes, secrecy, gold, high powered rifles, and heavy-duty style. John Wick cruises, and bruises, from one unfortunate soul to the next while toting an arsenal of weapons, crazy martial arts moves, and some sweet suits. But, with all these resources at his disposal, there was one thing holding him back.
John’s signature is his black suit and tie, but his tie is all over the place! How can you be effective at your job with all the hazards of a loose tie? In every fight scene, his tie dances around with the potential of hindering his punches, getting caught in the door during a car chase, and he could even be strangled by it!
John Wick could’ve been more effective if he’d just gotten a hold of his tie.