It's all about choices, Faith. The ones we make, and the ones we don't. Oh, and the consequences. Those are always fun.

Angelus ,'Smile Time'


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.


Jesse - Aug 30, 2005 4:54:15 pm PDT #2872 of 10002
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

Oh, also, Kenneth Cole was our orientation dinner speaker tonight, and he's totally my new boyfriend. FYI.


§ ita § - Aug 30, 2005 4:55:32 pm PDT #2873 of 10002
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

But I'm in my kitchen, right? The knives are closer.....

You've evacuated, silly, and are looting.

The ads for that make me think they are totally trying to be Coupling .

Oh, good luck with that.


Jesse - Aug 30, 2005 4:56:41 pm PDT #2874 of 10002
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

You've evacuated, silly, and are looting.

Oh, never mind, then.


le nubian - Aug 30, 2005 5:01:26 pm PDT #2875 of 10002
"And to be clear, I am the hell. And the high water."

As many as 30,000 people were being housed in the Louisiana Superdome, where toilets were overflowing and there was no air conditioning to provide relief from 90-degree heat.

I don't think it is 60K yet.


Emily - Aug 30, 2005 5:05:01 pm PDT #2876 of 10002
"In the equation E = mc⬧, c⬧ is a pretty big honking number." - Scola

I have no idea what you are talking about. Who said 60? It wasn't me, certainly!

In any case, I'm actually not capable of distinguishing between the two. I know one is twice the other, but when it comes to lots of people in one place, my brain goes, "One hundred, five hundred, one thousand, many."


Jesse - Aug 30, 2005 5:06:16 pm PDT #2877 of 10002
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

I'm like that on the whole thing, honestly. There's like, not so bad, pretty bad, and then jesus christ what are we going to do?


le nubian - Aug 30, 2005 5:09:58 pm PDT #2878 of 10002
"And to be clear, I am the hell. And the high water."

Mississippi is flooding 6 miles inland. That's what CNN says.


Nutty - Aug 30, 2005 5:12:47 pm PDT #2879 of 10002
"Mister Spock is on his fanny, sir. Reports heavy damage."

they had found people to say how genuinely he felt their pain. So there you go.

He might have the stuff for one-on-one, as others mention, but Clinton made such a pavane out of public emotional connection that it's hard to compete with him. (I also suspect that GWB is good with a particular kind of people, and bad with lots of others, while even some hard-core republicans were appalled to discover that they really liked Clinton's civic bathos.)

Everybody is passing tests! First Stephanie, babe in arm no less (or, babe in belly? I have forgotten the time schema), and then Emily! Now JZ will arrive and tell us she got an A in Advanced Can-Can Dancing. Congratulations and those little stress-relief squeezy-balls all round.


Jessica - Aug 30, 2005 5:14:55 pm PDT #2880 of 10002
And then Ortus came and said "It's Ortin' time" and they all Orted off into the sunset

So, Prison Break -- at one point, the guy he got the drugs from says something about him only being there three days, at which point he'd been to the infirmary twice. So except for the doctor's "See you Wednesday" comment, it did look like he was going every day to get his shot. I'm not sure what he expects to accomplish by sitting there staring at the vent in the floor for ten minutes every day, but I guess that's what the rest of the season is for.

As for the video, the gunshot flashes (and sound) could easily have been edited in after the fact -- hell, I could do that kind of effects work here at my desk at home. All they would have needed was for Lincoln to stand still with the gun for a few seconds.


sarameg - Aug 30, 2005 5:15:48 pm PDT #2881 of 10002

It's really kind of mindbending. Upwards of how many thousand people, accustomed to first world living, thrust into (forgive me, functioning third worlders, cause they don't have access to helis and MREs and whatnot) nearly the third world. It's a brutal adjustment. In at least a few feet of fetid water.

I just can't... I mean, god.

OK, so should an (unlikely, hills) hurricane evac hit me, I'm loading me, my cats, my laptops, my art, my journals and a few other precious items and photos and as many of my uncar-ed neighbors (Miss Louise, I'm looking at you. Even if I have to haul you out bodily) as possible and driving out. I don't want to be there.

Watching footage of people REFUSING evac even now "to save their home"... I mean, I can understand their logic, but it is faulty logic. Good luck, but frankly, that's a stupid decision. Driven by fear and denial. And it makes it so much harder. I'm in the opinion that they should just haul people out, honestly. Yeah, dictatorial and whatnot, but jesus. It's about lives, whether they want it or not. The gov't and agencies can take better care of people out of there than in right now. Every living person that remains in will cost more, and thus mean less for the rest.

I can't quite wrap my mind around and empty city of that size.