It’s that time again! Our friends at Break Media need a few good guinea pigs for their online research panel, and we figured, you know, if you’re not doing anything, you could help out by registering and filling out a survey or two? Yeah, I know that sounds terrible, but keep in mind the following…
– If you register by March 31st, you’ll automatically be entered in a drawing for an iPad 2.
– Every time you fill out a survey, you’ll earn points towards prizes like CagePotato t-shirts, music downloads, and occasionally more valuable items like streaming TV players (Apple TV, Roku).
– The info you provide can actually help us improve this site, giving you more of what you want, how you want it.
Please register for the research panel at breakmediapanel.com. Registration takes less than five minutes and you’ll be asked for some personal information, which is used to ensure that you are who you say you are, and for the purpose of incentive fulfillment. Once you’re registered, you’ll periodically receive e-mails with links to surveys that you can take if you feel like it. Make sense? If you have any questions, leave ’em in the comments section. Thanks for your continued support…
It’s that time again! Our friends at Break Media need a few good guinea pigs for their online research panel, and we figured, you know, if you’re not doing anything, you could help out by registering and filling out a survey or two? Yeah, I know that sounds terrible, but keep in mind the following…
– If you register by March 31st, you’ll automatically be entered in a drawing for an iPad 2.
– Every time you fill out a survey, you’ll earn points towards prizes like CagePotato t-shirts, music downloads, and occasionally more valuable items like streaming TV players (Apple TV, Roku).
– The info you provide can actually help us improve this site, giving you more of what you want, how you want it.
Please register for the research panel at breakmediapanel.com. Registration takes less than five minutes and you’ll be asked for some personal information, which is used to ensure that you are who you say you are, and for the purpose of incentive fulfillment. Once you’re registered, you’ll periodically receive e-mails with links to surveys that you can take if you feel like it. Make sense? If you have any questions, leave ‘em in the comments section. Thanks for your continued support…
Besides Muhammed “King Mo” Lawal, everyone I know who watched GI Joe as a kid looked forward to the “Knowing is Half the Battle” segments that taught us how to escape a house fire, avoid being kidnapped and molested and how to camp safely. If you watched the show on Saturday mornings or have seen any of the scores of parodies that have popped up the past few years, you’re going to enjoy the short fan-made spot above.
“Mo” used to enjoy the popular PSAs until the day he found out they were all a lie.
(Video courtesy of YouTube/FreeFightsForYou)
Besides Muhammed “King Mo” Lawal, everyone I know who watched GI Joe as a kid looked forward to the “Knowing is Half the Battle” segments that taught us how to escape a house fire, avoid being kidnapped and molested and how to camp safely. If you watched the show on Saturday mornings or have seen any of the scores of parodies that have popped up the past few years, you’re going to enjoy the short fan-made spot above.
“Mo” used to enjoy the popular PSAs until the day he found out they were all a lie.
When he was a kid in Tennessee, Lawal watched the episode where a boy who couldn’t swim was instructed by Torpedo how to tread water and make his way safely to shore after he fell off of a cliff into the water. The cartoon made it look easy, so Lawal jumped in the water the next time he was at his cousin’s house and promptly sunk to the bottom of the pool. Had his uncle not seen him go in, he likely would have drowned. He told me last year that Torpedo was a liar and that GI Joe nearly killed him and that soon after the incident turned to Heathcliffe for life advice and credits the mangy cat for influencing his scrappy fighting style.
And that’s your six degrees of separation lesson for the day of how GI Joe is directly related to MMA.