Saturday, February 16, 2008

Tracking the 123 Meme

I'm pretty late to the party, but I just ran across this on Chuck Hoffman's blog: "Grab the nearest book, open to page 123, go down to the 5th sentence, and type up the 3 following sentences."



Before I do that, I thought it would be interesting to try to track this meme back as far as possible. For the sake of my sanity, I'm not following multiple paths from posts that link to more than one source--I'll just pick the link that seems to be the primary source. So here goes:



nothing happens linked to Knowing and Doing linked to Exploration Through Example linked to a thaumaturgical compendium linked to michaelzimmer.org linked to Chronicles of Dissent linked to Fergie's Tech Blog linked to Threat Level linked to Danger Room linked to Abu Muqawama linked to Afganistanica: Mountain Tourism in Afghanistan linked to [My] State Failure Blog linked to Kings of War linked to MountainRunner linked to zenpundit.com linked to the glittering eye who gave a bad link that I had to track down to Independent Liberal linked to Donklephant linked to Stubborn Facts linked to another post on the same blog, linked to Sideways Mencken, who did not link, but referenced Internet Ronin linked to AmbivaBlog [and now I'm starting to tire of this game] linked to The Anchoress linked [not directly, had to dig it up *sigh*] to Some Have Hats linked to [again not directly...grr] Church of the Masses linked [incorrectly] to The Daily Grotto [warning! annoying chanting] linked to Aussie Coffee Shop linked to Where Angels Go which mentioned, but failed to link to the person who tagged them, so it's a dead end.



Whew. This was getting a bit tedious. Not to mention that it seemed to have gotten firmly entrenched in religious/pro-life blogs, which were getting on my nerves.



Just as well. Turns out Google returns almost half a million hits for "page 123" sentence, and there doesn't seem to be a way to sort results by date (the daterange operator failed me completely). The oldest post I could find on Google Blog search was this one, from November 24, 2004 (albeit for a slight variation on the meme--just the fifth sentence, not the three following it), but which clearly isn't the origin. Seems it was a meme floating around on LiveJournal around then. If anyone has better search-fu and can find an earlier post, let me know.



At this point, I've made myself pretty sick of this meme. Often it appears to be a means by which people can brag about whatever erudite text they may or may not actually be reading. Even so, I can't have wasted this much time and not play along. I've got two books nearly equidistant from my keyboard now. One is, at least in my field, too mundane to bother with: the Pickaxe book. The other sports the following 123/5/3 sentences:




The latissimus dorsi muscles have a major role in the deadlift: from the floor, the lat pulls back on the humerus to keep the arms from swinging forward away from the shins, and acts as an anchor on the upper part of the humerus to maintain the position of the bar directly under the shoulder blades until the bar crosses above the knees. The lats act in an essentially isometric way from the floor to the point where hip extension allows the arms to become vertical. At this point tension comes off the lats, and as the back becomes vertical, the arms drag the bar into the thighs as they assume an angle behind the vertical, opposite the starting position.


That's from Starting Strength by Rippetoe and Kilgore, which is a great book for learning how to do basic barbell lifts correctly (something we do a fair bit of in Crossfit). Coincidentally, that's just a couple pages past where I was actually reading about the deadlift. (Most interesting tidbit I've learned so far from the book: the importance of a solid grip when doing the dealift. If your hands start slipping, proprioceptive (love that word) feedback tells the back that what you're trying to lift is too heavy, and it basically gives up.)



I'm not going to inflict this on anyone else, but if you're reading this, feel free to prate on about whatever book you have near you.

4 comments:

  1. "An especially impressive non sequitur is a model of the world's first Ferris wheel, which debuted at the Exposition. It was 250 feet high (nearly as high as the capitol in Madison), and its brave passengers rode in thirty-six enclosed cars, sixty in each, for a total of 2,160 people, many more than the Nina, the Pinta, and the Santa Maria combined. An exhibit in the quincentenary department tells the story of a man who drove 30,000 miles photographing every community in the United States that was ever named Columbus, even if a tree out in the middle of a field was all that was left of it."

    - Wisconsin Curiosities - 2nd Edition - Michael Feldman

    "I'll fetch Linney after all. It's so rare the three of us have the evening together. WE can get in a game of Uncle Wiggily before she goes to bed."

    - Swing - a Mystery - Rupert Holmes

    ReplyDelete
  2. [...] Brad just posted about the Page 123 meme that’s been going around for a while now. He has a pretty good post, even attempting to trace the origins of the internet time-wasting sensation. So here were the two [...]

    ReplyDelete
  3. That's a pretty funny meme, but i have to say that i love this game. In a way, it shows us how confusing 3 sentences of a book we're not reading can look like, but we all know that when reading it, it means so much. May be a great way to show us that in life, we all win from getting to know things :)

    ReplyDelete
  4. [...] Jonathan tagged me for this bookish meme that’s been making the rounds for a few years: take a look at page 123 of whatever books [...]

    ReplyDelete