Early: You folks are all insane. Simon: Well, my sister's a ship. We had a complicated childhood.

'Objects In Space'


Natter 42, the Universe, and Everything  

Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, flaming otters, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.


tommyrot - Jan 26, 2006 10:26:06 am PST #2792 of 10002
Sir, it's not an offence to let your cat eat your bacon. Okay? And we don't arrest cats, I'm very sorry.

Oh, and when my cat got hit by a car when I was nine, or course. Somehow I don't think anyone else shares that one.

I remember. Sorry about that - I was distracted and didn't see it.

(I hope this isn't in too bad of taste....)


sarameg - Jan 26, 2006 10:27:20 am PST #2793 of 10002

I don't really view it as one trumping another, but I'm looking at it from counting them as "do you remember when" moment that marks your history and your place in it (see, cat does first, not second) and you are just not going to forget for whatever reason.


Tom Scola - Jan 26, 2006 10:28:53 am PST #2794 of 10002
Remember that the frontier of the Rebellion is everywhere. And even the smallest act of insurrection pushes our lines forward.

I was in volleyball practice after school when the gym teacher announced that Reagan was shot.

I was walking around campus and I overheard someone mention that the space shuttle blew up, but didn't take it seriously until I saw it on TV later.

On 9/11, I heard and felt it when the planes hit. I was riding a subway when the buildings collapsed.


Kathy A - Jan 26, 2006 10:28:54 am PST #2795 of 10002
We're very stretchy. - Connie Neil

The only assassination attempt that I remember hearing about was JPII's, and that was because I was in my Catholic high school when they made the announcement over the intercom and the teacher (I believe it was Sr. Irene, but I couldn't swear to it) had us all say a prayer, of course. I remember watching the footage of Reagan's on the news that night, but that's it.


DavidS - Jan 26, 2006 10:29:09 am PST #2796 of 10002
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

Bay Area people like to talk about where they were when the '89 earthquake happened.


lisah - Jan 26, 2006 10:29:32 am PST #2797 of 10002
Punishingly Intricate

My earliest memory of a public event was Nixon leaving the White House. We were visiting my family in Texas and watching tv at my great-aunt's house. I wasn't quite 6. There may have been some cheering.


Matt the Bruins fan - Jan 26, 2006 10:31:14 am PST #2798 of 10002
"I remember when they eventually introduced that drug kingpin who murdered people and smuggled drugs inside snakes and I was like 'Finally. A normal person.'” —RahvinDragand

The old man waving a gun around in his front yard on my route to work the morning of 9/11 made that one have rather more personal impact on me than most big world events.

I remember seeing the Challenger disaster on the big TV in my high school library, but I can't recall if I was seeing it live or if we were called out of class to watch after it had happened.


lisah - Jan 26, 2006 10:31:59 am PST #2799 of 10002
Punishingly Intricate

Bay Area people like to talk about where they were when the '89 earthquake happened.

Hah! My mom's friend who was living in the Marina at that time said she was on the toilet. In, like, her Christmas letter that year.


Ginger - Jan 26, 2006 10:33:56 am PST #2800 of 10002
"It didn't taste good. It tasted soooo horrible. It tasted like....a vodka martini." - Matilda

I was working in a corporate communications department and we had someone who got the AP wire. He yelled at us and we all ran out of our cubicles to watch it on TV. We had a building-wide closed-circuit TV setup and we turned it to CNN, so every conference room was full of people watching the news.

I remember where I was for the JFK, Bobby Kennedy and M.L. King assassinations; the first moon landing; the fall of Saigon, Nixon's resignation (I was a newspaper intern and had to do a man-on-the-street story.); Chernobyl and the Oklahoma City bombing. Garfield's assassination is pretty fuzzy, though.

I think JFK's death was the only one that felt emotionally comparable to 9/11.


sarameg - Jan 26, 2006 10:34:13 am PST #2801 of 10002

You know, I probably don't really have memories of a lot of this stuff because I probably didn't hear about it in the media. Dad watched the CBS evening news and McNeil Leher, but I'll bet when these things happened, I was informed by my parents in a low key way sometime well after the fact.

Hell, I just had to google when all this stuff was. I honestly don't know, except what decade.