We gotta go to the crappy town where I'm the hero!

Wash ,'Jaynestown'


Natter 40: The Nice One  

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.


sarameg - Oct 31, 2005 6:07:55 pm PST #436 of 10006

I want to live in a nonsuburban neighborhood that does TOT. I loves thems kiddums. That is actually one thing that has kept me here, a neighbor with teenage great-grandkids I've watched grow up and who dote on my cat.

And please stop mentioning kitties. I'm in fret mode towards the tortie. Born of MY first cat (Sky- he put up with a toddler's handling and was so protective and lovey to me) getting hit in front of my house when I was 9, partly. t she's taken care of her kitten. She can take care of herself. I'm just biased towards house cats being preferred.

Why did I eat chex mix? It tears the hell out of my mouth.


Jesse - Oct 31, 2005 6:14:31 pm PST #437 of 10006
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

When I was little, we went with grownups. The little kids I saw out tonight were with grownups. Ringing a stranger's doorbell, if that's what you're doing, isn't any more safe at 5 than at 6:30, IMO. Of course, most of the trick or treating I've seen in places I've lived recently was to stores, not houses.


sarameg - Oct 31, 2005 6:17:57 pm PST #438 of 10006

The grownups always trailed us from about 5 until 9 (mostly my dad's students near 9. And they came in to drink.) On our street, we knew everyone, even the Reverend, the likely dealer. The scariest house was Mrs. Olson's. Because she was all mean and cranky and Getoffamylawn! But she did give the best candy.


DebetEsse - Oct 31, 2005 6:19:30 pm PST #439 of 10006
Woe to the fucking wicked.

We always did the round of relatives' houses, not having a neighborhood to speak of.

That may be why I don't have the deep-seated Halloween-love.


Kalshane - Oct 31, 2005 6:20:36 pm PST #440 of 10006
GS: If you had to choose between kicking evil in the head or the behind, which would you choose, and why? Minsc: I'm not sure I understand the question. I have two feet, do I not? You do not take a small plate when the feast of evil welcomes seconds.

It's not the ringing the doorbells that the light, or lack there of, makes the difference. It's walking down streets in dark costumes with possible visibilty issues due to masks and kids being in a rush to get from house to house so they can hit as many as possible before the hours are officially over. I went out to pick up the final pieces of my costume during trick or treating Saturday and had a couple kids run right out across the road at an intersection where I had no stop sign, but thankfully I was intentionally driving slowly and saw them in plenty of time to stop.


Vortex - Oct 31, 2005 6:26:16 pm PST #441 of 10006
"Cry havoc and let slip the boobs of war!" -- Miracleman

My BFF's kid is afflicted with the [family name] Head. They all have ENORMOUS heads, as in she can't wear a baseball cap. the kid was born with a hole in his intestine (he's fine now), and was once measured 40th percentile for weight and 97th percentile for head size. Why do I bring this up? Because they dressed him as a pumpkin for Halloween, but he had no stem, because the cap wouldn't fit on his head.


Trudy Booth - Oct 31, 2005 6:27:54 pm PST #442 of 10006
Greece's financial crisis threatens to take down all of Western civilization - a civilization they themselves founded. A rather tragic irony - which is something they also invented. - Jon Stewart

is it time for my 'child molestors didn't spring into existance a week ago' rant?

glow tape on some costumes. little kids needed escorts. big kids knew how to cross streets.


Emily - Oct 31, 2005 6:41:46 pm PST #443 of 10006
"In the equation E = mc⬧, c⬧ is a pretty big honking number." - Scola

I grew up in a housing complex that was really good for trick-or-treating. Although you'd always get those creepy people who got really into Halloween and would dress up in devil costumes and have creepy lighting and music playing, and they'd be all "Mwahahahaa" at you. Man, I hated those houses, but you couldn't skip them, because they just sat there with the door open, waiting for the trick-or-treaters and it would be rude.


dw - Oct 31, 2005 6:53:59 pm PST #444 of 10006
Silence means security silence means approval

glow tape on some costumes. little kids needed escorts. big kids knew how to cross streets.

And the guy two houses up with the twentysomething "boarder" living in the house? Well, he might be light in the loafers.

And the people next door had a walk-in meat locker, which seemed odd considering that the grocery store was a block away.

Oh yeah, in 1979 things were "normal" in my neighborhood.


DavidS - Oct 31, 2005 7:08:08 pm PST #445 of 10006
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

The magic of TiVo has brought us Zombies on Broadway! [link]

Heh! Did you see me and JZ talking about it in the movie thread?

Evie's the cutest fluffy bunny ever. She and ita should have a bunny cute-fight.