Stop that right now! I can hear the smacking!

Giles ,'Never Leave Me'


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.


bon bon - Nov 29, 2005 7:01:28 pm PST #7889 of 10006
It's five thousand for kissing, ten thousand for snuggling... End of list.

ita, some flavors for you: [link]


tommyrot - Nov 29, 2005 7:13:33 pm PST #7890 of 10006
Sir, it's not an offence to let your cat eat your bacon. Okay? And we don't arrest cats, I'm very sorry.

Groups Protest Cannibalism in Video Games

November 29,2005 | WASHINGTON -- Video games glamorizing guns and violence have long drawn the ire of media watchdog groups. This holiday season, they say they have found a bloody new wrinkle to hate: cannibalism.

Games featuring graphic scenes of cannibalism, "F.E.A.R." and "Stubbs the Zombie in Rebel Without a Pulse," were among the 12 "games to avoid" listed Tuesday by the National Institute on Media and the Family.

"It's something we've never seen before," said institute president David Walsh, warning that today's games are "more extreme" and more easily available to underage kids than ever before.

In "Stubbs the Zombie," the lead character eats the brains of humans as blood splatters across the screen.

"It's just the worst kind of message to kids," said Sen. Joe Lieberman, D-Conn., who joined institute officials at a press conference announcing the group's 10th annual video game report card. "They can be dangerous to your children's health."

So the game "Stubbs the Zombie" might send a message to kids that zombieism is cool? Kids might emulate Stubbs and start killing people and eating their brains?


Emily - Nov 29, 2005 7:14:53 pm PST #7891 of 10006
"In the equation E = mc⬧, c⬧ is a pretty big honking number." - Scola

Math and I parted ways in the middle of Algebra 2. Once I was out of that class I never went near math again.

Math is very very sorry and wants you to come back.

I really wish we could have a Buffista Retreat Week. We could do Math for Grownups Who Can Articulate Their Feelings, and nobody would have to do problem sets who didn't want to. I made a class full of people think calculus might possibly be not all that bad after all, dammit! Because, yeah, some people do have more of an aptitude for it than others, but that doesn't mean it ought to be torture for anyone!

I'm a wee bit tipsy and in love with the math right now. Math is looking at me askance and saying it needs to get up early in the morning, but that's okay. Math understands my foibles.

(Today my terribly energetic and adorable algebra teacher said, "Okay! Today we're going to go back to fourth grade, only we're going to do it right this time!" Sometimes math isn't austere and proper -- sometimes it's bouncy and gamine. Okay, I am more tipsy than I'd actually realized. My anthropomorphizations and I are headed off to bed. I have no idea what I just spelled, but it was scary. Look at that! It's gigantic and freakish! Er, anyway. I'm totally nervous about my first job interview in six years. Wish me luck!)


Herah - Nov 29, 2005 7:16:47 pm PST #7892 of 10006
I don't want to be Superman. I want to stay little and be next to Mommy.

On my way home, I stopped at the grocery store. My purchases were Kleenex, sudafed, nyquil, OJ, lemon juice, and prepackaged food for dinner.

The woman packing everything up asked me very cheerfully "so how are you today".

Last August, I went into a drugstore in Orlando with prescriptions for antibiotics for two different kids and for three different asthma meds, two nebulized and one oral, and told the pharmacist we weren't in his computer because we were from out of state. He said, "Oh, my, you're having a wonderful vacation, aren't you?"

(Actually, I had complained about the pace we were planning, because I had wanted to do something more relaxing...we slowed things down a lot, and nobody was seriously ill, so it wasn't all that bad.)


§ ita § - Nov 29, 2005 7:17:59 pm PST #7893 of 10006
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Those are great flavours, bon! But if they were being truly respectful of the culture, they'd not have included alcohol in Zion or Rasta.


Scrappy - Nov 29, 2005 7:21:19 pm PST #7894 of 10006
Life moves pretty fast. You don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it.

The Colbert Report is fabulous this evening. Stephen "Mr. Scrappy" Colbert is being hilarious.


Cass - Nov 29, 2005 7:40:06 pm PST #7895 of 10006
Bob's learned to live with tragedy, but he knows that this tragedy is one that won't ever leave him or get better.

I really wish we could have a Buffista Retreat Week. We could do Math for Grownups Who Can Articulate Their Feelings, and nobody would have to do problem sets who didn't want to. I made a class full of people think calculus might possibly be not all that bad after all, dammit! Because, yeah, some people do have more of an aptitude for it than others, but that doesn't mean it ought to be torture for anyone!
I'm a wee bit tipsy and in love with the math right now. Math is looking at me askance and saying it needs to get up early in the morning, but that's okay. Math understands my foibles.
I (heart) Emily. A lot.
"Oh, my, you're having a wonderful vacation, aren't you?"
Mastering the obvious...


P.M. Marc - Nov 29, 2005 8:23:27 pm PST #7896 of 10006
So come, my friends, be not afraid/We are so lightly here/It is in love that we are made; In love we disappear

Em, are you cheating on Education with Math?

antibiotics for two different kids and for three different asthma meds, two nebulized and one oral

ACK! Parenting is more complex than the frickin' brochure claimed!


Strega - Nov 29, 2005 8:45:52 pm PST #7897 of 10006

I think that it would be best to combine pre-algebra, Algebra I, and Algebra II into a two-year sequence, then follow that with geometry, and then trig and pre-calc, then calculus.

I think there should be multiple tracks. With HS science classes, if physics wasn't your bag you could at least think, maybe biology will be more interesting. Deciding to take algebra2/trig in 10th grade meant I had to take pre-cal in 11th grade, and I had to take calculus in 12th grade. Well, or fail completely and retake a class, but that wasn't an appealing option. When I rule the world, there will be the standard algebra-trig-calc track, or you can take stuff like stats, logic, & economics instead. Which is shit more people should know, anyway.

Plus, then the people who are taking algebra would either want to be there, or could comfort themselves by thinking, "At least it isn't statistics." Knowing you have a choice makes a difference, even if you're only choosing the lesser evil.


Cass - Nov 29, 2005 8:50:25 pm PST #7898 of 10006
Bob's learned to live with tragedy, but he knows that this tragedy is one that won't ever leave him or get better.

Em, are you cheating on Education with Math?
Her heart belongs to Education but sometimes Math just smiles that certain way and runs its fingers...