John Spencer (Leo from WW) is dead.
Damn, he was only 59. I enjoyed his work very much.
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.
John Spencer (Leo from WW) is dead.
Damn, he was only 59. I enjoyed his work very much.
And I was just reading WW fanfic, so I'm even more shocked. RIP, John Spencer.
He was one of my favorite characters. That's really young.
Ooh, Ginger's link is a much better price. Grab it!
NOOO! Not Leo! DAMMIT TO HELL.
John Spencer (Leo from WW) is dead.
Damn. RIP, man.
Shitty. Not my Leo. Sad now.
Today I got to find out the answer to the question:
How many times will someone fax something and have the fax cut off before they check to see that the fax number is not in fact a voice number?
8 times, apparently.
8 times, apparently.
For the opposite situation (someone calling a fax #, expecting voice line), the answer is several times a day for several months.
Oh, I finally have a (correct) diagnosis now. It's somewhat rare, judging by the fact that it only produces 414 Google matches, and by the fact that it took my Dr. three or four attempts to pronunce it. I have papillophlebitis, which in English can also be described as "central retinal vein occlusion."
Ophthalmoscopically, there are dilated and tortuous retinal veins, dot & blot as well as flame shaped hemorrhages, exudates, cotton wool spots, retinal and macular edema, and disc edema. In extreme cases, there is posterior and anterior segment neovascularization and possibly neovascular glaucoma.
I totally have tortuous retinal veins. (OK, not actually sure about that.) So far, only a little neovascularization (if I am correct in guessing what that means), and no neovascular glaucoma.
Hopefully the vision in that eye will improve somewhat, but it's very unlikely I'll regain anything like normal vision in that eye. So mostly they wanna prevent it from getting worse, and figuring out what caused it so they can make sure it won't happen to the other eye. If they can't find anything that caused it, then that'll mean I'll have about a 1% chance of it happening to the other eye.