Mal: And I never back down from a fight. Inara: Yes, you do! You do all the time!

'Shindig'


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.


le nubian - Sep 03, 2005 3:56:35 am PDT #4375 of 10002
"And to be clear, I am the hell. And the high water."

Okay, I'm laughing at the new fuddrucker's thing. How the hell did that happen?


brenda m - Sep 03, 2005 3:57:50 am PDT #4376 of 10002
If you're going through hell/keep on going/don't slow down/keep your fear from showing/you might be gone/'fore the devil even knows you're there

Did you see what was there last night? Priceless.


DXMachina - Sep 03, 2005 4:00:10 am PDT #4377 of 10002
You always do this. We get tipsy, and you take advantage of my love of the scientific method.

You almost have to wonder if Fuddruckers owes money to their developer.


le nubian - Sep 03, 2005 4:07:26 am PDT #4378 of 10002
"And to be clear, I am the hell. And the high water."

I saw last night too!

I think a lot of people saw last night and just hacked into the site. That's the only explanation i can come up with.


Topic!Cindy - Sep 03, 2005 4:09:01 am PDT #4379 of 10002
What is even happening?

In other news, Red Cross not allowed in New Orleans. Not before. Not NOW.

Some of that makes a lot of sense, actually. Or would, if the feds hadn't fucked up their role in this so badly.

My guess is that it's largely a case of the area not yet being secured. Of course, it's been days and days, and so I can easily maintain my outrage, because the area hasn't been secured dammit, and therefore the Red Cross has been unable to enter and provide basic relief.

If someone had explained early on that the RC's role in all of this was to provide assistance outside the disaster area so as not to hamper S&R efforts, I think it would have been a lot more palatable.

Yes.

...

On CNN now, they're reporting there's a fire in some unidentified warehouse, I think it said the fire was near the Aquarium.


le nubian - Sep 03, 2005 4:17:37 am PDT #4380 of 10002
"And to be clear, I am the hell. And the high water."

20-year-old commandeers a bus and loads 70 people up and drives them to Houston. Wow.

The first busload of New Orleans refugees to reach the Reliant Astrodome overnight was a group of people who commandeered a school bus in the city ravaged by Hurricane Katrina and drove to Houston looking for shelter.

Jabbar Gibson, 20, said police in New Orleans told him and others to take the school bus and try to get out of the flooded city.

Gibson drove the bus from the flooded Crescent City, picking up stranded people, some of them infants, along the way. Some of those on board had been in the Superdome, among those who were supposed to be evacuated to Houston on more than 400 buses Wednesday and today. They couldn't wait.

The group of mostly teenagers and young adults pooled what little money they had to buy diapers for the babies and fuel for the bus.

After arriving at the Astrodome at about 10:30 p.m., however, they initially were refused entry by Reliant officials who said the aging landmark was reserved for the 23,000 people being evacuated from the Louisiana Superdome.

"Now, we don't have nowhere to go," Gibson said. "We heard the Astrodome was open for people from New Orleans. We ain't ate right, we ain't slept right. They don't want to give us no help. They don't want to let us in."

Milling about the Reliant entrance, Sheila Nathan, 38, told her teary-eyed toddler that she was too tired to hold him.

"I'm trying to make it a fairy tale so they won't panic," said Nathan, who had four grandchildren in tow. "I have to be strong for them."

After about 20 minutes of confusion and consternation, Red Cross officials announced that the group of about 50 to 70 evacuees would be allowed into the Astrodome.

All were grateful to be out of the devastation and misery that had overtaken their hometown.

"I feel good to get out of New Orleans," said Demetrius Henderson, who got off the bus with his wife and three children. Many of those around him alternated between excited, cranky and nervous, clutching suitcases or plastic garbage bags of clothes.

They looked as bedraggled as their grueling ride would suggest: 13 hours on the commandeered bus driven by a 20-year-old man. Watching bodies float by as they tried to escape the drowning city. Picking up people along the way. Three stops for fuel. Chugging into Reliant Park, only to be told initially that they could not spend the night.

Every bit worth it.

"We took the bus and got out of the city. We were trying to get out of the city," James Hickerson said.

Several passengers on the bus said they took the matter into their own hands earlier Wednesday because they felt rescuers and New Orleans authorities were too slow in offering help.

"They are not worried about us," said Makivia Horton, 22, who is five months pregnant.


Kat - Sep 03, 2005 4:24:21 am PDT #4381 of 10002
"I keep to a strict diet of ill-advised enthusiasm and heartfelt regret." Leigh Bardugo

I'm not convinced that Bush cares about white people more than black people.

I agree in part with Strega. I don't know about claims of racism, but I'd argue that Bush doesn't care about poor people, black or white.

New TV season. I really want Kitchen Confidential to do well because I have a love on for BC. But I'm not hopeful.


§ ita § - Sep 03, 2005 4:55:22 am PDT #4382 of 10002
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Chicken prices are going to go up in Jamaica because of Katrina. 7%.

Eighty percent (of Jamaica's? The article wasn't clear) of grain is shipped from Mississipi ports.


le nubian - Sep 03, 2005 5:00:59 am PDT #4383 of 10002
"And to be clear, I am the hell. And the high water."

9:00 A.M. - DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) -- U-S Air Force officials said today that 300 airmen will be sent home from Iraq and Afghanistan to help their families cope with emergencies on a hurricane-devastated airbase in Biloxi, Mississippi.


Theodosia - Sep 03, 2005 5:14:14 am PDT #4384 of 10002
'we all walk this earth feeling we are frauds. The trick is to be grateful and hope the caper doesn't end any time soon"

VW is over my house helping me clean up my basement. The Clean Sweep folks have nothing on her.