Julie Benz also mispronounced Tim's last name at her DragonCon panel, but she made up for it by saying that she thought Tim was the writer who wrote the best Darla.
And in all the Joss-related panels, people would stand up to ask questions and say "Blah blah Josh Whedon," and you could hear fifteen people simultaneously hiss "JOSS".
I know two people named Josh. I call them Joss by mistake everytime I say their name.
I so want to go to one of those panels just so I can call him Mister Sweden and watch the righteous freak out.
'suela, were you Cofax?
UTTAD, I was, am, and always will be, cofax. It's actually my primary online identity, and I answer to it far better than I do to "Suela".
(Context: I've been called "Cofax" or variants thereof since I was about 8; "Consuela" or "Suela" was a fairly short-lived college nickname that I resurrected for Table Talk and didn't expect to last this long.)
I so want to go to one of those panels just so I can call him Mister Sweden and watch the righteous freak out.
My BiL insists on calling him "Wheldon". It makes me insane, especially as he always wants to give me tips about "what that Wheldon guy is up to".
I know two people named Josh. I call them Joss by mistake everytime I say their name.
I do this with my son's friend Josh, and have for the past two years. I mostly do it when talking to my son. I tend to call the kid "um" a lot.
I know two people named Josh. I call them Joss by mistake everytime I say their name.
I love this sooooooo much! I have a good friend that always calls him Josh. I keep trying not to correct him, but I just can't not.
Is it possible to not correct people? I need to learn how to do this.
If you figure that out, please teach me. I also need to learn that skill.
I correct my mother every time we talk. I have just recently taught her to say Firefly rather than Fireflies when talking about the show.