What is the joke of the day on yahoo buzz?”
Last week Barack and Michelle Obama hosted a reception for visiting foreign dignitaries at New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art. Over the course of the evening, the president, whose “amazingly consistent” smile created a viral video, and first lady posed for over 130 photographs with their guests, all of which were later posted to the State Department’s Flickr page. This caused a problem: Included was a shot of the Obamas posing with Spanish Prime Minister José Luis RodrÃguez Zapatero, his wife Sonsoles Espinosa, and two daughters, Laura, 16, and Alba, 13, who’ve never had photographs of themselves published previously in print or online due to a Spanish law prohibiting the media from doing so. The photo of Zapatero and his family with the Obamas was quickly removed from Flickr at the request of the Spanish government but still lurks online (in the shot seen here their faces are blurred). The flap is adding concerns on the issue of the privacy of world leaders’ children in the digital
Searchers have a question they’d like answered: Who started Father’s Day? Who do they have to thank for the mandatory bonding time they’re spending with dear ol’ dad this weekend? Lookups on “father’s day origin” and “who started father’s day” inspired us to investigate. The results of our research shook us to our very core. OK, maybe not to our core, exactly. But the story of how Father’s Day came to be is still pretty interesting. A blog from a Detroit church explains that most historians credit a woman named Sonora Smart Dodd with creating the holiday. Ms. Smart Dodd was “inspired by her father, a widower and Civil War veteran named William Jackson Smart.” She wanted to do something to honor his memory while paying respect to all fathers. Clearly she was a woman with a plan. Alas, not everybody agreed with her pleas to “give it up for the papas” (our words, not hers). In fact, Ms. Smart Dodd’s proposal was often mocked when it first made the rounds. Folks felt it unnecessary. And th