Fred: It's the pictures in my mind that are getting me. It's like being stuck in a really bad movie with those Clockwork Orange clampy things on my eyeballs. Wesley: Why imagine? Reality's disturbing enough.

'Shells'


Natter 34: Freak With No Name  

Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.


Tom Scola - Apr 11, 2005 10:11:24 am PDT #4701 of 10001
Remember that the frontier of the Rebellion is everywhere. And even the smallest act of insurrection pushes our lines forward.

I was wondernig why the web recap of the game wasn't updating.


Betsy HP - Apr 11, 2005 10:11:30 am PDT #4702 of 10001
If I only had a brain...

But I like it when you're blabby and opinionated. I learn stuff.


Kathy A - Apr 11, 2005 10:12:47 am PDT #4703 of 10001
We're very stretchy. - Connie Neil

That is one of the reasons why Wrigley Field is so beloved, DXM--they've done an excellent job of keeping the advertising to a bare minimum.


Jessica - Apr 11, 2005 10:13:42 am PDT #4704 of 10001
And then Ortus came and said "It's Ortin' time" and they all Orted off into the sunset

Note: If it's Antonin Scalia -- and you could probably raise at least a half-sound argument that it is -- you're starting from a very different base than if it's Howard Dean.

Yes, this. Exactly.

[eta: And you know, I'm not even going to bother pointing out that I am, in fact, a huge Tolkien fan. Doesn't mean I have to like/enjoy/identify with/forgive everything about either the man or his works.]


Jesse - Apr 11, 2005 10:14:11 am PDT #4705 of 10001
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

Also, I've been too blabby and opinionated.

No such thing!

My view -- and I won't apply it to Lewis because I haven't read his work -- is that I won't let incidental examples of the views of an age spoil my enjoyment of something. For example, I won't turn against a 1930s movie just because the only black character is a maid or the porter on a train. Now, if the character's part involves being a living embodiment of racist stereotypes, it's a very different story.

What he said. Except I can even get past characters being living embodiments of stereotypes, sometimes, depending.


Betsy HP - Apr 11, 2005 10:17:00 am PDT #4706 of 10001
If I only had a brain...

My cafeteria lunch had yummy yummy Yukon Gold mashed potatoes and I am NOT going to eat any more of my much too generous serving.


Nutty - Apr 11, 2005 10:21:38 am PDT #4707 of 10001
"Mister Spock is on his fanny, sir. Reports heavy damage."

Who's the standard of our age? (Note: If it's Antonin Scalia -- and you could probably raise at least a half-sound argument that it is --

Hope not. For one thing, I hope my age is not characterized by pointless crabbiness.

In ballpark news, the Red Sox game is under way. In the introduction of the players, all the Yankees got booed as expected, except Mariano Rivera, who got cheered wildly for giving up the hits that let us win last week. He laughed about it, tipped his cap.

I have skipped lunch. This is assuredly a mistake. What lunch can be achieved at 3pm, I wonder?


JohnSweden - Apr 11, 2005 10:24:53 am PDT #4708 of 10001
I can't even.

In ballpark news, the Red Sox game is under way. In the introduction of the players, all the Yankees got booed as expected, except Mariano Rivera, who got cheered wildly for giving up the hits that let us win last week. He laughed about it, tipped his cap.

That reminds me, the game is on tv here, so I need to get out of work sharp so I can catch the end of it.


Burrell - Apr 11, 2005 10:26:46 am PDT #4709 of 10001
Why did Darth Vader cross the road? To get to the Dark Side!

I won't let incidental examples of the views of an age spoil my enjoyment of something.

I think it's a complicated issue. For me, much depends on what kind of "view" it reveals (I'm more forgiving of sexism in the 1930s than anti-semitism or fascism, for example). And what kind of writing it is. It's easier for me to pin a label onto a work of art than onto the artist who created it, unless that artist has made it abundantly clear in his/her personal and polemical writings that he/she shared that worldview.


DXMachina - Apr 11, 2005 10:29:34 am PDT #4710 of 10001
You always do this. We get tipsy, and you take advantage of my love of the scientific method.

That is one of the reasons why Wrigley Field is so beloved, DXM--they've done an excellent job of keeping the advertising to a bare minimum.

Oh, Fenway is pretty much the same. They make their money by charging outrageous prices for standing room "seats." Shea is one of the loud stadiums,not helped by the fact that it's directly under one of the flight paths out of LaGuardia.