This is a picture of a salt mine. I have chosen it because my class was once taken to a salt mine near my home town as a part of an excursion. This salt mine began as a set of massive tunnels carved through layers of rock-salt, the ground was also covered in salt, salt was everywhere. They lead to a large, brightly lit hall with an elevated ceiling. It had many sculptures made of salt of various folk heroes, cartoon characters and famous people, ornaments carved in the walls and the like. From there it lead to an even larger hall that had an entire football field set up inside and a small two-story lounge area with a cafe. The places I've described are certainly not the entirety of this salt mine, but these are the places I was taken to and remember the best.
Video: If Junk Food Commercials Were Honest
This video is a part of "Honest Ads" series produced and published by the YouTube channel Cracked. I like this series because it is genuinely funny but also provides serious commentary on the advertisement industry and the products being advertised. The formula of these videos is to flip the usual advertisement upside down and instead "market" the downsides of the real life product. The main character and "advertiser" is Roger Horton, this character is supposed to be an archetype of a modern corporate executive: smooth-talking but cynical, affable but greedy. He condescendingly and blatantly inserts information about the many problems and schemes involved with the industry he represents or the product he advertises, because he knows he'll be able to get away with it.
This video series is unique in its presentation and content, which is why I like it.
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