The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side

The Lighter Side

@thelighterside

Woman surprises grandma with simple trick to remove corn husk. Everyone is gobsmacked.
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Woman surprises grandma with simple trick to remove corn husk. Everyone is gobsmacked.

Removing a corn husk can be an annoying task when cooking dinner. After peeling the “jacket” layers off the delicious vegetable, you’re stuck pulling fibers out for what feels like an eternity. But there’s a simple trick that stops you from having to go through the whole fiber-finding mission, and a woman named Bella Devereux just revealed the secret to her grandmother. Recently, the woman spent time with her grandmother and decided to share an easier way to de-husk a corn cob. Devereux filmed the interaction and uploaded the video to social media, sharing the hack with everyone. Corn cobs with husks.Photo Credit: Canva In the video, the granddaughter unrolls a corn cob from a wet paper towel. The cob is on the counter after microwaving it for four minutes. It still has the husk. She then takes a paper towel to hold the corn cob in place while she cuts off the bottom. Once the bottom is cut, she uses the paper towel to stand the cob up, then squeezes it from the top. The corn smoothly slides out of its green jacket, still standing. No stringy fibers are seen hanging onto the golden vegetable. The ease with which the corn cob came out of the husk amazed the grandmother. Grandmother smiling at blonde woman.Photo Credit: Canva “Oh, for goodness sake, I never thought of doing that! And it comes out perfect every time!” the grandma exclaims. “Why hasn’t anyone told us about that before? Because by the time you do this with each piece, then you’ve got to go pick all the bits off of it. Ahhh!” Devereux’s grandmother can barely get out another sentence due to her bewilderment. She asked how long Devereux’s mother had known about this hack and how. The grandmother says, “It couldn’t be better. That is amazing!” View this post on Instagram Eventually, they heat another piece of corn to give the grandmother a chance to do it herself. “I cannot believe it. It was so clean,” the grandma says before she excitedly does her own corn cob. “I cannot believe that it’s as easy as that. How many years have I struggled to get it all off, and then I’ve had to go and do this and take off all the hair. Where have I been all this time?” Devereux’s grandmother isn’t the only one gobsmacked by how easily the corn came out of the husk. Others simply cannot get enough of how excited the grandma is with her new discovery. Grandmother and granddaughter looking at laptop.Photo Credit: Canva “Thank you for actually letting us witness her get a chance to do it as well,” someone says. “Oh my, I love this so much,” another writes. One person chimes in, “Amazing life hack and a wonderful reaction.” Someone else admits, “Her reaction speaks for all of us!” This person came across the video a week too late, writing, “I just fixed corn on the cob last week. I would have loved knowing this as I cleared those numerous corn silks.” One viewer adds, “I love how excited she was. I also did not know this trick.” “This is brilliant & who in this world came up with this hack first,” another asks. The post Woman surprises grandma with simple trick to remove corn husk. Everyone is gobsmacked. appeared first on Upworthy.

Comedian struggles to accurately explain how people used to get online with AOL
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Comedian struggles to accurately explain how people used to get online with AOL

Coming of age at the same time as the Internet is a wild experience that can be hard to explain to younger generations. At a recent stand-up event, comedian Josh Johnson found himself in a mixed-age crowd discussing early Internet use. He quickly realized just how difficult it would be to explain how people got online in the early 2000s. For one, the process of getting onto the World Wide Web would likely sound made up to anyone under 30. And honestly, is there anyone who fully understands how it worked? Still, the comedian gives it his best shot, and hilariously struggles through it in a clip shared on his Instagram. Josh Johnson.Photo credit: Hayden Schiff/Wikimedia Commons “When I got the Internet, it was on CD,” Johnson reveals. “To this day, I don’t know how that worked. What…what…what is on the CD? What is that, because I thought you had to have…” That’s when he realizes he’s going to struggle with the explanation. Johnson warns the audience the process is going to be annoying, drawing even more laughter from those watching. Audience members laughing.Photo credit: Canva “Some of you are young, and this is going to sound fake, but you used to…” he says before pausing to laugh with the audience. “No. You used to get Internet…okay…you would get an offer in the mail. They would mail you Internet. You would open the mail, and it would be Internet in the mail, but it would be a CD.” He then explains that a CD is a compact disc, and that Internet companies like AOL would send them through the mail as free trials. They could also be picked up at grocery stores near the checkout lanes. The comedian says that when you received the CD, “you would put it in the computer and for whatever reason, you got like 30 hours of Internet, which was a lot back then. I know y’all use it up in a day, today, but 30 hours used to be a lot of Internet, and you would surf the web. It was called surfing. We had a name for the World Wide Web, that’s where the WWW comes from. Do you want to hear any other facts that sound like they’re from the Middle Ages?” View this post on Instagram The more he explains, the more ridiculous it sounds out loud. With the Internet now easily accessible through Wi-Fi—not weird discs that mysteriously connect you—the old way feels almost unbelievable. But it’s true. There are likely storage boxes and landfills full of free Internet trial discs, long forgotten after cable Internet replaced dial-up. People can’t get over how the world worked in the early days of the technology boom. “Wait until the youths find out Netflix used to send DVDs to rent through the actual mail,” a commenter writes. Audience members laughing.Photo credit: Canva Another person writes, “Not to mention we would have several different internet providers because of all the ‘free trial’ disks. Each month or whenever you ran out of internet from the previous disk…what a time to be alive.” Someone else jokes, “They weren’t just mailed. They came flying in like letters to Harry Potter’s front door…” One person says, “My frugal midwestern mom had us on dialup for ages bc she hoarded all the AOL free trial CDs. I will hear that dialup tone on my death bed good lord.” “And had bout 8 different email addresses so you could keep getting multiple free trials,” another person writes. The post Comedian struggles to accurately explain how people used to get online with AOL appeared first on Upworthy.

Man takes group of boys grocery shopping, teaching them to use their best instincts to be helpful
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Man takes group of boys grocery shopping, teaching them to use their best instincts to be helpful

In many families, the wife often does the bulk of the grocery shopping. But as younger generations of men take on a more active role in day-to-day household management, there can be a learning curve. One man is trying to get ahead of that by teaching young boys how to shop for groceries on a budget using their own instincts. King Randall founded The X for Boys, a nonprofit that helps underprivileged boys access the resources they need to succeed. The organization also teaches life skills they may not be learning at home. In a recent video posted to Instagram, Randall is seen in a grocery store with another man and a group of boys, introducing the idea of men grocery shopping for their families. A man and woman in a grocery store.Photo credit: Canva Randall explains that the boys should come to the grocery store prepared with a list and a strategy. As they shop, items should be checked off, even if the list isn’t organized by where things are located in the store. “So in order to lessen our time in the store, what we’re going to do is, we’re going to categorize these,” he says. After one of the boys grabs a shopping cart, Randall explains they have a $150 budget before asking what section of the store they’re in. “We’re in the produce section, right?” he asks. “So what we’re going to do is we’re going to go down our list, and we’re going to go one by one and see what’s in produce.” A little boy putting milk in a grocery cart.Photo credit: Canva The boys enthusiastically agree and follow along. Randall adds that they’re shopping for a family of four, then shows them how to compare prices as they look for apples their family would eat. They continue through the produce section, checking off items along the way. Throughout the grocery run, Randall uses an imaginary wife in his examples, joking that when they’re newly married, they may need to call and confirm certain products. Commenters thought the grocery store run was an important experience for the boys. Many viewers of the now-viral video praise him for putting effort into teaching young boys how to be helpful using their own instincts throughout. View this post on Instagram One person says, “I absolutely love this. This is definitely needed in our community. All young men need to learn these skills to develop their young lives ~ It will last them their lifetime!” Another writes, “As an educator, MORE OF THIS!!! Life skills! Executive functioning and money management, family planning, communication-I want to hear the debrief. What did we learn? When can we apply this? What transferable skills can we identify? Bravo” A little boy putting bread in a shopping cart.Photo credit: Canva Someone else chimes in, “Sir, you have no idea of the ripple effect you are making on future generations. May God bless you and give you favor.” “I am so obsessed with this,” another person writes. “These kids won’t forget this lesson!! They’re so engaged and listen so well.” “I love this!!! Keep this up sir!” a commenter adds. “And key…when youve been married a while and knowing what is needed will go a long way in the home with lowering your wife’s mental load. Glad you mentioned being newer to married and after been married you would know. This teaches to not use weaponized incompetence.” This isn’t the only life skill Randall is teaching. His program also teaches the boys how to iron, order at a restaurant, pump gas, and more. They’re learning skills they’ll use for the rest of their lives. The post Man takes group of boys grocery shopping, teaching them to use their best instincts to be helpful appeared first on Upworthy.

8-year-old’s ‘Sweet Monsters’ Drawing Chosen as Winning Design to Decorate Real Train
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8-year-old’s ‘Sweet Monsters’ Drawing Chosen as Winning Design to Decorate Real Train

“With the drawing competition, NS wants to inspire children in a playful way for train travel,” the translated statement from NS said. Source: 8-year-old’s ‘Sweet Monsters’ Drawing Chosen as Winning Design to Decorate Real Train Neat.

Half-blind, 12-yo Dog Fights off Hungry Bear to Protect Family and Pets in New Mexico: “She’s our little savior ’
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Half-blind, 12-yo Dog Fights off Hungry Bear to Protect Family and Pets in New Mexico: “She’s our little savior ’

A rural New Mexico family was left in a state resembling heartbroken wonderment when they discovered their 12-year-old dog who’s afraid of the vacuum cleaner fought off a bear encroaching on their property. Honey the dog was recorded in security camera audio having it out with the bear, newly emerged from hibernation and famished; with […] The post Half-blind, 12-yo Dog Fights off Hungry Bear to Protect Family and Pets in New Mexico: “She’s our little savior ’ appeared first on Good News Network.