@ljs look, here's how serious czechs are about the venus of dolni vestonice
ready to shoot doc. oliva, phd. in the head the moment he makes an inappropriate joke
@ljs very difficult for mr. oliva to keep his composure
you know, since the turn of the century or so he himself has transitioned from being an archaeologist to being a subject of his own field's study. he's a 20th century archaeologist.
so when he comes to a lecture, he arrives with a stack of handwritten notes, sits down and reads from them monotonously. his ability to interact with people is long gone.
the only thing in the world what cheers him up are the depictions of primary or secondary sexual characteristics. thankfully, being a 20th century archaeologist, he sees them everywhere.
which is why he's looking at the venus' butt
stay strong docent oliva!!!
@ljs of course nobody knows what venus of vestonice was used for
which means 20th century archaeologists tend to assume it's porn
but fairly recently a child fingerprint, made when the clay was still wet, was identified on the figure's butt (this may explain why is mr. oliva inspecting it)
so perhaps it was a child's toy
:(
@lkundrak @ljs I know nothing of present day Mr. Oliva however sometimes in summer of 2001 or 2002, I spent a week working for him in a field near Vedrovice, sleeping in a tent. 🙂
There was other guy from the museum working at the site, Petr Neruda, who was young at the time. IIRC years after this, there was some piece of news that there was some row between the two? 😜
@lxo he's a real person. I'm not too familiar with him, just happened to attend a couple of his lectures (that were above totally above my grade) out of curiosity. I think he's fairly popular here; he used to be the head of human evolution museum in my city and generally is the go-to person when the media needs to talk to someone accomplished in the field of archaeology.
It's perhaps obvious, but "oliva" indeed literally means "olive" in Czech. I don't think it's a very common name, but it doesn't sound odd or unusual either.
The other Oliva I am familiar is Jon Oliva of heavy metal band Savatage (also his brother, used to play guitar in the band but died in a car accident in 90's). I think they're from Tampa, Florida.
@vbabka @djasa @ljs wow, fifth century. pretty fucking insane.
i suspect not much will change about slovakia, for better or worse. they're pretty much used to having total dickheads and career criminals run the country. when things go too bad, a higher force sends a sensible president to restore balance
@ljs @djasa @vbabka oh, let's clear this issue up.
*** British lads don't know how to drink! ***
your young ones seem to be blissfully unaware that you get blackout drunk from drinking too fast, not necessarily too much! it's perfectly okay to sit down, run your mouth and slowly drink your beer. no need to chug it down quickly -- you're staying the whole night and having ten more anyway.
but i think i've noticed the problem. you're tapping the beer wrong! where's the fucking hat! of course you're finishing the beer down quickly, without a hat it oxidizes and turns to piss.
i've seen british people being offended by the foam hat. incredible. there has to be one inch of a wet foam that stays until you finish the beer. it's there so that the beer could be drank slowly!
if you intend to finish the beer down quickly, it's perfectly okay to ask for no foam (in czechia you ask for "hladinka", in slovakia you get laughed off) but that shouldn't be the default, and you only do that if you really really are getting just one beer.
Edit: jesus, this got me emotional. perhaps the right time to apply for czech citizenship.
Also, why does my spell checker suggest changing "british" to "brutish". Oh, it's the capitalization.
@ljs @djasa @vbabka the crazy things are probably "snyt" (1/2 glass foam) or "mliko" (only foam). It's not like they're too popular unless we're showing off to tourists, but they're actually fairly pleasant to drink. The thing is that it's very wet, not too foamy, essentially feels like drinking a little lighter beer.
When it comes to proving ourselves, same thing here. Except that the drinking culture is unhealthy enough that we go through this earlier in our teens.
Nor would we ever find ourselves in a position where boarding a plane and flying somewhere where the drinks are cheaper would make sense. I guess then you're motivated to drink even more, so that the numbers add up. A pity the fines and medical expenses ruin them afterwards :(