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Folks, the reason to bring up this guy is that the Red Solo Cup is a 'Murican party staple, and also a part of coming of age / rite of passage for, oh, just about every teen and young adult. Mentioning the inventor's death is no different than mentioning the passing of some video game notable: the person touched our lives in a small way, with something familiar to most of us. Not that it's a big deal for 300+ million people here, but that it's a touchstone for nearly all of us.

So the Red Solo Cup in itself isn't particularly significant since it's just another cup, yet it holds a specific cultural significance over here because of its ubiquity at celebrations. Basically, you see a Red Solo Cup and good times come to mind.

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tinyE: R.I.P. the man or the cups, because I have a bunch of the cups here. You can come over and grab some if you need them.
Got any ping pong balls? XD
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tinyE: R.I.P. the man or the cups, because I have a bunch of the cups here. You can come over and grab some if you need them.
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HereForTheBeer: Got any ping pong balls? XD
Oh beer pong. No, but there are two Universities up here so I'm sure I can find some. Problem is there is a five foot snow drift keeping me from physically getting outside. :P
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HereForTheBeer: Folks, the reason to bring up this guy is that the Red Solo Cup is a 'Murican party staple, and also a part of coming of age / rite of passage for, oh, just about every teen and young adult. Mentioning the inventor's death is no different than mentioning the passing of some video game notable: the person touched our lives in a small way, with something familiar to most of us. Not that it's a big deal for 300+ million people here, but that it's a touchstone for nearly all of us.

So the Red Solo Cup in itself isn't particularly significant since it's just another cup, yet it holds a specific cultural significance over here because of its ubiquity at celebrations. Basically, you see a Red Solo Cup and good times come to mind.

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tinyE: R.I.P. the man or the cups, because I have a bunch of the cups here. You can come over and grab some if you need them.
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HereForTheBeer: Got any ping pong balls? XD
So you can't "rite of passage" with a different coloured cup?
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HereForTheBeer: Got any ping pong balls? XD
Grab a couple of roombas for even more shenanigans.
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HereForTheBeer: Folks, the reason to bring up this guy is that the Red Solo Cup is a 'Murican party staple, and also a part of coming of age / rite of passage for, oh, just about every teen and young adult. Mentioning the inventor's death is no different than mentioning the passing of some video game notable: the person touched our lives in a small way, with something familiar to most of us. Not that it's a big deal for 300+ million people here, but that it's a touchstone for nearly all of us.

So the Red Solo Cup in itself isn't particularly significant since it's just another cup, yet it holds a specific cultural significance over here because of its ubiquity at celebrations. Basically, you see a Red Solo Cup and good times come to mind.

Got any ping pong balls? XD
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XYCat: So you can't "rite of passage" with a different coloured cup?
Yes, that's exactly correct. One can not be considered an adult in the US - and you have to prove it in order to vote - unless one has partied with a Red Solo Cup.

/s
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XYCat: So you can't "rite of passage" with a different coloured cup?
The Solo cups are cheap and more durable than other cups. They come primarily in red. They do make blue and yellow (as referenced in the video I posted earlier) but the most common color of the cups is red.
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tinyE: R.I.P. the man or the cups, because I have a bunch of the cups here. You can come over and grab some if you need them.
Both, but it would be Rest In Pieces for the cups and I'm sure you'll make better use of them than I do so I'll pass.
I see a biopic has been released lately.
To be honest, I never knew there was a significance to them being "Red". I could swear I've seen as many blue ones as red. But lost in all this conversation is his other grand invention...the plastic coffee cup lid!
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XYCat: Is this serious?
Yes, this is just one of those quirky bits about America, sort of like how your on Christmas Island, but I'm pretty sure you guys don't spend the entire year decorated like it's Christmas.

Although, it would be awesome if I were wrong about that.
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tinyE: With all due respect to the dead, how the fuck do you get credit for inventing a red cup!?

If I take one of those and paint it yellow, can I get a copyright and then when I die, get hedwards to make a fucking thread in my honor!? :P
Have you heard ? http://www.straitstimes.com/world/europe/william-salice-creator-of-kinder-surprise-dies
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blotunga: We only have white and transparent plastic cups. Why would you want them to be of a different color? And who cares about the color anyway.
It's become a sort of cultural short hand. They only come in a few colors, but for some reason, the red ones tended to get used by college students for parties.

They're synonymous with underage drinking to the point where drinking anything out of them in a picture on social media can lead to problems. There's been teachers fired over pictures of them drinking out of the cups, even in the absence of information about what they were drinking, because underaged drinking is a no-no.
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Tcharr: Someone died. People mourn. Sometimes for their own loss, but other times in sym/empathy for others. It is a human thing, not a western thing. ;)
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Tarm: It is a western thing to go to the extent we're at and to keep the momentum. We simply have better and better access to information about others. Soon we citizens will take over the role the state has in 1984.
It's not really a western thing, it's a developed world thing. It happens in places where people grow up expecting to more or less live out their entire life expectancy and die of some sort of illness decades down the road.

I highly doubt that folks in ISIS controlled areas would be thinking about random inventors and famous people dying unless they had a specific reason to. Whereas, in areas where the mortality rates are lower, we have the luxury of thinking about a famous person dying as rare.
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tinyE: With all due respect to the dead, how the fuck do you get credit for inventing a red cup!?

If I take one of those and paint it yellow, can I get a copyright and then when I die, get hedwards to make a fucking thread in my honor!? :P
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Painted_Doll: Have you heard ? http://www.straitstimes.com/world/europe/william-salice-creator-of-kinder-surprise-dies
For the Americans, that's probably roughly analogous. Those candies have been banned in the US for so long that they lack any cultural significance to us. But, I'm guessing that if you're from a place where those were available, that they probably have some fond memories.
Post edited December 30, 2016 by hedwards
I tend to frown on anything the FDA does, but putting a piece of plastic/toy inside of a piece of candy is totally fucked up. :P

I love prizes, but put them WITH the treat, not inside the goddamn thing! XD
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blotunga: We only have white and transparent plastic cups. Why would you want them to be of a different color? And who cares about the color anyway.
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hedwards: It's become a sort of cultural short hand. They only come in a few colors, but for some reason, the red ones tended to get used by college students for parties.

They're synonymous with underage drinking to the point where drinking anything out of them in a picture on social media can lead to problems. There's been teachers fired over pictures of them drinking out of the cups, even in the absence of information about what they were drinking, because underaged drinking is a no-no.
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Tarm: It is a western thing to go to the extent we're at and to keep the momentum. We simply have better and better access to information about others. Soon we citizens will take over the role the state has in 1984.
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hedwards: It's not really a western thing, it's a developed world thing. It happens in places where people grow up expecting to more or less live out their entire life expectancy and die of some sort of illness decades down the road.

I highly doubt that folks in ISIS controlled areas would be thinking about random inventors and famous people dying unless they had a specific reason to. Whereas, in areas where the mortality rates are lower, we have the luxury of thinking about a famous person dying as rare.
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hedwards: For the Americans, that's probably roughly analogous. Those candies have been banned in the US for so long that they lack any cultural significance to us. But, I'm guessing that if you're from a place where those were available, that they probably have some fond memories.
I never understood Muricans. You're allowed to drive at 16, buy a gun at 18 but aren't allowed to drink until 21.
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tinyE: I tend to frown on anything the FDA does, but putting a piece of plastic/toy inside of a piece of candy is totally fucked up. :P

I love prizes, but put them WITH the treat, not inside the goddamn thing! XD
I honestly don't see the problem. The damn thing opens easily. No one tries to eat the whole thing, and even if you did, it would just fall apart and the little box with the toy will fall out.

I had no idea kinder surprise is banned in the US, and it's one of the saddest things I heard. What a joyless place it must be.
Post edited December 30, 2016 by Breja