![]() Certainly an option given all the content out there. Or we could simply never watch them again. Really, it’s to be expected as societal viewpoints change…sort of a marker of how far we’ve collectively come.Īnd so, what do we do with these problematic pieces of old-school pop culture? Well, we can certainly update them to better reflect a more modern attitude, but that also comes with a set of potential problems. ![]() ![]() While there are no doubt some timeless classics from our childhood that remain every bit as amazing as we remember, many are straight-up cringey upon a later viewing. Others felt she wasn’t being fair by eating a restaurant-cooked meal while her child ate food from home. Many felt she wasn’t being fair by taking a seat without buying a meal, while others thought the restaurant was a good place for a child to learn patience. The mother of two created quite a stir on TikTok after posting the video, with some people shaming her for bringing outside food into a restaurant. He does not care what he eats he just wants to eat." "I can just hand him this and let him go to town,” she said. Smith added that when they get to the restaurant, her child can begin to eat immediately without having to wait for a server to take their order and the kitchen to prepare the food. Hey, at least we both had space in the video, Smith demonstrated what she prepared for her son's meal that day: a sandwich filled with peanut butter and jelly, banana slices, cubed cheddar cheese and a chocolate-flavored Lara bar, all neatly organized in a plastic container. Caleb is majoring in aerospace engineering. It's really not helping me grow in my learning, and I think I'm ready for college." Truth is, when I was 12 years old and bored, I was trying to find enough returnables to cash in so I could go play Space Invaders. Caleb's mom Claire recalled her son saying: "Mom, I'm bored. "As we started to interact with other parents, and had other children, then we started to realize how exceptional this experience was, because we had no other frame of reference," said Caleb's father, Kobi to First Coast News. While he qualified for MENSA at age three, he didn't join until he was five years old, still making him the youngest African-American boy to join, according to his parents.Ĭaleb flew through elementary, middle and high school. At the age of three, he was not only learning English, but Spanish, French and even Mandarin. His choice of literature also included the United States Constitution. By two years old, he was reading far beyond Dr.
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