I just think it's rather odd that a nation that prides itself on its virility should feel compelled to strap on forty pounds of protective gear just in order to play rugby.

Giles ,'Beneath You'


Natter .38 Special  

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.


DXMachina - Aug 22, 2005 10:20:35 am PDT #235 of 10002
You always do this. We get tipsy, and you take advantage of my love of the scientific method.

there's no slaughter rule in soccer?

Nope, at least not when I was coaching. Plus, no sport would have one at that level. Those are for rec and youth leagues so no one's feelings get hurt.


§ ita § - Aug 22, 2005 10:25:11 am PDT #236 of 10002
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

"I don't need to pull from my experience for a character, and I've never understood why actors would, except for lack of ability, imagination or research," he says. "I had all three things, so this is a little frustrating to me, because it denies my work and the research that I did."

Joaquin Phoenix reacting to the assumption he was drawing on his experience of mourning a brother while filming the Johnny Cash story. Article.

Uh, why wouldn't you? I'm not saying he has to, just that it's odd to not understand why not using the feelings you've experienced to bring a character to life is a valid choice.


tommyrot - Aug 22, 2005 10:29:54 am PDT #237 of 10002
Sir, it's not an offence to let your cat eat your bacon. Okay? And we don't arrest cats, I'm very sorry.

The cold, hard facts on cryonics

Antifreeze much better than anything in your car is now pumped into a client's corpse. State-of-the-art cooling techniques are used to chill the body parts down to minus 320 degrees Fahrenheit before they are stored inside tall stainless steel tanks that look like they might have come from a microbrewery. The battered bicycle helmet that used to be strapped onto the deceased's head during the cooling phase is soon to be replaced with something more clinical-looking.

But the experts here, who have been struggling to perfect their techniques since 1972, still haven't quite conquered the ultimate bane of cryonics practitioners everywhere: the unfortunate phenomena known in the trade as "acoustic fracturing events."

In layman's terms, those would be the audible cracking noises made by the brain and other internal organs as they shatter from the effects of the extreme cold.

"It's exactly that kind of noise when you drop an ice cube into a glass of Coke," explained Tanya Jones, Alcor's director of technical operations. "In the best-case scenario we've ever had, it was only five fracture events. We are working on the engineering to see how to eliminate this problem."

"acoustic fracturing events" - um, eww?


Vortex - Aug 22, 2005 10:39:18 am PDT #238 of 10002
"Cry havoc and let slip the boobs of war!" -- Miracleman

What's a slaughter rule, and which sports have them?

a slaughter rule is basically a rule that stops a game when one team has so many points more than the other that it would be impossible for the other team to catch up. Baseball is one sport that I can think of that has one.


sarameg - Aug 22, 2005 10:41:56 am PDT #239 of 10002

At one point my dad gave me earrings and pointedly mentioned that the designs on them were fertility symbols.

My mom stuck a kokopelli keychain in my stocking one year but was sensible enough to make clear it wasn't anything passive aggressive, she just thought it was a neat variation on the design. This was long before the little flute playing fertility dude started appearing everywhere.


Nutty - Aug 22, 2005 10:42:30 am PDT #240 of 10002
"Mister Spock is on his fanny, sir. Reports heavy damage."

I am trying to figure out, did that soccer team not have backup players? Like, what if the goalie gets hamstrung in the championship game? Isn't there anybody else who could have filled in?

This is why baseball has 25-man rosters for a game where only 9 people are on the field at a time. And while there are occasionally hilariously poor "backup" plans, it's very rare that a team is caught so far out that there is literally nobody who can fill in at a given spot on the field.


DXMachina - Aug 22, 2005 10:43:23 am PDT #241 of 10002
You always do this. We get tipsy, and you take advantage of my love of the scientific method.

Baseball is one sport that I can think of that has one.

Not at the pro, semi-pro, or even high amateur (i.e., college) level.


Vortex - Aug 22, 2005 10:43:41 am PDT #242 of 10002
"Cry havoc and let slip the boobs of war!" -- Miracleman

My mother gave my brother an african statue for christmas. She told him that it was a fertility doll. A few months later, he and his "friend" had a pregnancy scare (not that my mother knows this). He got rid of it. He tried to give it to me, but I was having none of it.


sumi - Aug 22, 2005 10:43:47 am PDT #243 of 10002
Art Crawl!!!

Is there a slaughter rule in regular baseball?

I know that there are slaughter rules in football and in baseball as played by the kids in one of the local park districts.


tommyrot - Aug 22, 2005 10:44:12 am PDT #244 of 10002
Sir, it's not an offence to let your cat eat your bacon. Okay? And we don't arrest cats, I'm very sorry.

I am trying to figure out, did that soccer team not have backup players? Like, what if the goalie gets hamstrung in the championship game? Isn't there anybody else who could have filled in?

They did have a substutute.

I wonder if the sub was just really crappy? and/or she'd never been trained as a goalie?