Top products from r/TIL

We found 9 product mentions on r/TIL. We ranked the 9 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

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Top comments that mention products on r/TIL:

u/FacelessBureaucrat · 2 pointsr/til

I thought that was coined by David Brooks?

The way he uses it, it doesn't mean hipsters in the sense of urban youth, but of old-style hippies who grew up and became successful but held onto many of their hippie values. Hence bourgeois.

The hipsters I know aren't really capitalists.

u/pyrrh0 · 2 pointsr/til

The screencap is from "The Magus" (1968) if anyone is interested. IMO, the book is much better than the movie but both have merits.

u/thebrightsideoflife · 2 pointsr/til

>Not sure what winning is though.

You can't win an occupation.
Kokesh, who is a Ron Paul supporter and not a Democrat, held that sign up at the '08 Republican National Convention while McCain was giving his speech. More people need to understand that the US is not there to "win", it's not there to bring "freedom" or "democracy" to the people. The US is in two endless wars because War is a Racket.

u/nicksws6 · 3 pointsr/til

I use a regular kettle or Iced tea maker

I think most Americans don't use one because most people have a dedicated coffee or tea maker. Or just go to Starbucks.

u/halberdier25 · 2 pointsr/til

Ted Lawson's book was excellent. He flew one of the B-25's.

Also, for shits and giggles, check out Jimmy Doolittle's autobio. The guy was a total BAMF his entire life.

u/XxionxX · 1 pointr/til

I know that they are real, but I am with you because I have never seen anything like these. There are several books about them(that is the best one I could find).

This website seems like a shitty resource because there are no alternative symbols, or pics of symbols in use.

u/archevial · 1 pointr/til

Interesting that one of your favorite movies (Munchausen) is actually considered a complete disaster by most critics/people in the industry/Terry himself. You should find a copy of "Losing the Light" - it's about the trials and failures of Munchausen. Also - the documentary "Lost in La Mancha" is one of the best examples of how a wildly talented/visionary director and a team of the most talented filmmakers couldn't put together "The Man Who Killed Don Quixote".

I'm a huge Gilliam fan... a bit disappointing to see that he's remaking Time Bandits as a 3D popcorn flick...