according to dozens of websites originating from China, Turkey and Great Britain -Īnd a recent, short video taken while she was "teaching" one of her classes has gone viral, making her an instant sensation on the internet. She is reportedly a math teacher from Minsk, Belarus Oksana Neveselaya is one such distraction/inspiration. One can be distracted by the teacher's physique and daydream about her, or one can be inspired and pay the utmost attention to every word she says. Having an attractive teacher is like a double-edged sword - it can be either a distraction or an inspiration. Why do you need dresses or name tags when you can identify the gender with the right bend! The men's bathroom is on the left while the women's bathroom is to the right. This has to be the most confusing sign ever. Now this pair of bathroom signs are not only funny but they also some old school advice that one should definitely pay heed to. This bathroom sign has a funny way of showing that it is a unisex bathroom.
The owners have decided to play with their customers by giving them a choice between two bathrooms. Here are some of the most funny bathroom signs that have made the wait just a little easier. Instead of using some faceless stick people, they have used some of the funny bathroom signs that are surely going to take your mind off the matter at hand. However, there are some establishments that have utilized this opportunity to show their creativity. The man illustrated here was so light, so funny and so friendly that Forest Whitaker's Oscar winning performance in "The Last King of Scotland" was more terrifying and more realistic than Dada himself.When you are somewhere out and have the urge to go to bathroom, waiting in the queue is one of the most dreadful tasks. It's good for historical references, it has its importance, quite good to watch but that's it. The guy didn't had a clue of what he was saying, making his presence here something laughable rather than a dignifying portrait of his legacy, and he could have made so much more for his country. And politically speaking this man and the film have nothing good to say except a enormous contradiction when Idi says he likes Nixon but hates Kissinger, both part of U.S.
He controlled everything, he wanted to present his tender moments with his 18 sons, or his Discovery Channel moments where the crocodiles and a elephant pay tribute to the man (so he thinks that's what the animals are doing). And he was all that! The film doesn't add anything interesting but it's not Schroeder's fault, it's Dada's own fault this being something almost irrelevant. But that's what power makes with people, it makes them greedy, blind to other peoples problems, it makes them unreasonable. The guy is nuts and it was unbelievable someone like him had the chance to be the leader of a nation. He might not appear as the cannibal some say he was, or the man who commanded the murder of thousands of people (the film only mentions the Minister of Foreign Affairs, who was alive during the making of the film, a voice over explain he was killed two weeks later, presumably because he wasn't effective in his duty), he might not appear as a bad man at all but we can sense his craziness, the absurd in the things he exposes or even in his fight against Israel.
Self-portraits are dangerous in the measure that the audience will only get what the portrayed wants to reveal about himself, which is his good side, after all who wants to show his own bad temper and mean deeds to the world? It would be a funny picture, since most of the time Dada appears to camera always smiling, joking around about anything (the 'Save the British' fund with Uganda donations destined to England's poor economy at the time was hilarious), if we weren't forced to remember who the man on the screen is and why he's not funny. The documentary "Général Idi Amin Dada: Autoportrait" directed by Barbet Schroeder ("Murder by Numbers" and "The Reversal of Fortune") presents us the self-portrait of one of the most mindless dictators ever existed, the megalomaniac Idi Amin Dada, Uganda leader from 1971 to 1979.