I go online sometimes, but everyone's spelling is really bad. It's... depressing.

Tara ,'Get It Done'


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.


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.


§ ita § - Jan 17, 2006 8:50:28 am PST #786 of 10002
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

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.

I don't know the details of the appearances, but was there an issue that looked like too little briefing, or none at all?

I think going on either show can be great exposure, but someone's got to have the job of handling appearances.


sarameg - Jan 17, 2006 8:52:33 am PST #787 of 10002

Yeah, I heard that this morning too. It made a couple of calls a bit more comprehensible. But, um, channel 9 newspeople? Psst. It's called a press release. Just for YOU! Noreallytruly!

Strange, strange morning.

Also? I think we should let the italians do all the various interviews. They have really nice accents.


§ ita § - Jan 17, 2006 8:53:57 am PST #788 of 10002
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Oh, dear lord. I must go see this.


Jessica - Jan 17, 2006 8:54:04 am PST #789 of 10002
If I want to become a cloud of bats, does each bat need a separate vaccination?

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

This -- it's fine to have no interest in/knowledge of pop culture, but if you're doing a TV appearance, for goodness sake, watch an episode first!


Betsy HP - Jan 17, 2006 8:58:53 am PST #790 of 10002
If I only had a brain...

OT: Why is House stubbly all the time?


bon bon - Jan 17, 2006 8:59:46 am PST #791 of 10002
It's five thousand for kissing, ten thousand for snuggling... End of list.

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.

Since Bob Bob (the philosophy grad student) isn't near a computer, I will reprint something he wrote about these things happening to him.

Let me tell you about my first "academic moment."
---
I lived in Germany from July 1998 to June 1999. Don't let anyone tell you otherwise: it gets cold in Germany, Black Forest or no Black Forest. Once, when it was really cold, I bundled up--hat, gloves, scarf, coat, clothes--and went outside. After going shopping and undergoing the scathing insults of the typical German cashier (e.g., "your skin does not smell of lanolin!"), I returned back to my cell of an apartment.

I took off my gloves and unlocked the door. I went inside and played Baldur's Gate II for two hours, and then I got ready to go back to my Vateruniversity, Philips-Universitaet.

I got my coat on, got my scarf on, got my hat on, got my gloves ... where were my gloves?

I searched my apartment for half an hour, to no avail. So I thought to myself, "they couldn't have gotten far in this prison cell of an apartment--oh, God, why am I in this hell-ful land?! I have no pleasure-others,* I have nothing to kill;** I've got to get out and back home to Dayton!! But first, my hand-shoes.*** They couldn't have gotten far, so I'll look for them when I get back from found-food-in-the-basket-putting."****

I went out of my apartment, I closed the door, and I happened to look down the hall.

At the end of the hall were my gloves.

See, what I had earlier done was (1) take off my gloves; (2) throw my gloves down the hall; (3) take out my key; (4) and unlock my door.

(2) was the academic moment.
---
I had another academic moment a few years later.

I had just arrived in Dayton from Ann Arbor. I turned off my car, got out, and took my stuff inside the house. My Mom, Dad, and dearly departed cat, Vivaldi, greeted me. I was having a fun time. Then, two days later, I decided to leave the house to go out somewhere.

But I couldn't find my keys. Now, my house is a lot larger than my German "apartment", so I had to do a lot more looking.

I still couldn't find them.

Finally, in desperation, I decided to go out and look in my car. There, sitting in the ignition, were my keys. My radio was still on. Luckily, my car still worked; but the keys were in the ignition for two days. The moral of the story? My parents live in an extraordinarily safe neighborhood.
---
Today, I had my third academic moment. (Since I'm Catholic, all it takes is three academic moments for me to be canonized as an academic.)

I was getting ready to go to the DMV to renew my license, when, at the door to the apartment, I remembered that I hadn't taken a Diet Coke with me for the hour-long road trip. I left the door, went to the fridge, opened it up, got out the Diet Coke, closed the fridge door, took out my keys, and attempted to lock the fridge door using my keyfob. I pressed the "lock" button twice, but I never heard a honk from the refridgerator. Finally, I realized what I was doing and wrote this.
---
So was that my third academic moment? Well, it wouldn't have been, but this was the third time I've tried to lock the fridge like that. So yes. This was my third academic moment.

* I have no friends.
** I have nothing to do.
*** But first, my gloves.
**** ... from grocery shopping.


Jessica - Jan 17, 2006 9:00:49 am PST #792 of 10002
If I want to become a cloud of bats, does each bat need a separate vaccination?

Stubble improves crankitude. See also: Wesley.


§ ita § - Jan 17, 2006 9:02:06 am PST #793 of 10002
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

What excuse do the rest of us blockheads have when we do stuff that's stupid like that? Senior moments? Blonde moments?

Unrelatedly, I love George Clooney:

But only minutes later, Clooney was amiable and charming, no matter what question was put to him, even when asked if he'd consider starring with Heath Ledger if there were to be a sequel to "Brokeback Mountain."

"Heath is awfully handsome, so probably," Clooney responded.


Betsy HP - Jan 17, 2006 9:05:23 am PST #794 of 10002
If I only had a brain...

I call it a "memfault". My life is a memfault lately.