Anya: We should drop a piano on her. It always works for that creepy cartoon rabbit when he's running from that nice man with the speech impediment. Giles: Yes, or perhaps we could paint a convincing fake tunnel on the side of a mountain.

'Touched'


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.


Sue - Jan 17, 2006 8:37:39 am PST #776 of 10002
hip deep in pie

Where's Bob Bob? He can tell some great stories about the leading philosophers of our time and their inability to do basic tasks.

Totally. My friend's husband is a classics prof and an insanely smart guy who can hold forth on philosphy, art, sports...but he's not the most practical guy on the planet. Things like time and keys and chores just pass him by.


Emily - Jan 17, 2006 8:39:23 am PST #777 of 10002
"In the equation E = mc⬧, c⬧ is a pretty big honking number." - Scola

Either way it makes a little uneasy.

This is me, except extremely uneasy. I actually don't watch the interviews, largely for this reason. But I think I'd be almost as uncomfortable with on-the-street interviews -- it'd be a little better because it wouldn't feel like the people were targeted for that kind of humiliation, but still...


Sue - Jan 17, 2006 8:39:41 am PST #778 of 10002
hip deep in pie

I still think that politicians should have some knowledge of pop culture, or at least have interns that can tell them about this weird comedy news stuff before they go on.

Yeah, they should totally be briefed. I think some of them think they are smarter than they actually are, however. And they underestimate how smart TDS/Colbert people are.


Emily - Jan 17, 2006 8:41:27 am PST #779 of 10002
"In the equation E = mc⬧, c⬧ is a pretty big honking number." - Scola

too mullet-ty?

Not mullet-y at all. Gorgeous. But can it really look like that every day? What's it look like when it's at home?


sarameg - Jan 17, 2006 8:41:59 am PST #780 of 10002

Hell, I've never seen TDS or TCR. I'm still not certain what Colbert's schtick IS, except that it may be a faux-interview thing. I don't have cable.

(not claiming anything about my intelligence level. Just pointing out that here, on a board that has roots in a pop culture thingie, there is someone who has only a vague understanding of what those shows are.)

That said, I'd hope if you were invited to be a guest on some tv thing, you or your agent or assistant would at least find out the bare minimum about the invitees. Cause if you don't and are made to look like an idiot, well...here's my shoe. Thwap yourself upside the head for me.


Megan E. - Jan 17, 2006 8:43:23 am PST #781 of 10002

But it does look like it would require a lot of product.

I'm a product girl.

On a conference call with my colleagues from across the country. I'm looking at pictures of haircuts instead of participating since it is mindnumbing.


bon bon - Jan 17, 2006 8:44:05 am PST #782 of 10002
It's five thousand for kissing, ten thousand for snuggling... End of list.

Where's Bob Bob? He can tell some great stories about the leading philosophers of our time and their inability to do basic tasks.

Seriously! I should get him in here.

The guests on the Colbert Report who don't have much of a sense of humor are the "Better Know a District" types. The guests on the stage are usually savvy policy wonks. I don't know if I necessarily blame the Representative's staffers for allowing his or her boss on the show when you get a huge amount of district exposure for some minor discomfort.


Megan E. - Jan 17, 2006 8:44:08 am PST #783 of 10002

But can it really look like that every day? What's it look like when it's at home?

That's the issue. I'll talk to my hairstylist before going forward.


Kat - Jan 17, 2006 8:46:59 am PST #784 of 10002
"I keep to a strict diet of ill-advised enthusiasm and heartfelt regret." Leigh Bardugo

Hey sarameg, someone from your outfit was on the radio today talking about how Hubble found 2 new moons just in time (well, you know 9 years early) for New Horizons not to splat in to them.

Good on ya!


Rick - Jan 17, 2006 8:48:36 am PST #785 of 10002

Things like time and keys and chores just pass him by.

The key thing was a persistent problem in my group of absent minded academics. People would lock themselves out of their offices and then stand in the hallway looking confused, or they would drive all the way into work and discover that they had no key to get into their office. This, usually five minutes after their classes were supposed to start, with their course materials in the office. The most comical times were when there were two of them at once standing in the hallway speculating on how this could have happened again.

We solved it by having all of our offices set to the same key. Now any of us can open all of the offices, so only one person in ten needs to remember to bring a key.