In our house, we decided that "the bow" was a not so secret pillow for the boring parts of the show.
Natter 43: I Love My Dead Gay Whale Crosspost.
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.
My monitor renders the dressaday pic as shiny off-black, not dark green. Hencing the confusion.
So it is Monday after all, then. sigh
Blame sarameg.
Hey!
Today is stupid. Stupid day.
I may need to take more Sudafed before I can make that WTF?! call to DC.
I've made two work calls and been in touch with the office all morning, now I want to nap, but there is construction going on in the building making noise.
Blame sarameg.
Secret message to sarameg: Don't let them confuse you. Everything is my fault. Even if I have no idea what you're talking about due to massive skipping.
How not to cheat on a drug test:
Here's a cautionary tale if you're a woman planning to use a fake penis filled with someone else's urine to pass a drugs test as part of a job application: don't take it to the local convenience store and ask the clerk to microwave it "so the urine inside would be body-temperature and fool those giving the drug test".
So now you know, thanks to Leslye Creighton, 41, of Wilkinsburg, and Vincent Bostic, 31, of Pittsburgh, who were cited last Friday for "criminal mischief and disorderly conduct in the 23 February incident at the Get Go! gasoline and convenience store in McKeesport, about 10 miles east of Pittsburgh", the Washington Post reports.
According to the quite remarkable account of the attempted fraud, Police Chief Joseph Pero explained that, "Bostic had filled a fake penis with his urine that Creighton, a friend, planned to use to pass a drug test she was taking to get a job".
Police aren't exactly sure "why or how Creighton chose to use a device that mimics the male sex organ to pass her drug test", but are pretty certain that the attempted member-warming rendered the microwave subsequently unusable because it "couldn't be used for food once bodily fluids were cooked inside it".
Hence the criminal mischief charge - based on a "criminal intent to damage the microwave" - of which defense attorney William Difenderfer said his clients had no such intent and were prepared to reimburse the store for the loss of the machine.
Difenderfer said: "I certainly understand the ramifications and I'm certainly not saying it wasn't a stupid thing to do. But there's a lot of bizarre stuff that we don't always have a remedy for in the crimes code."
I have a new project to start. The bits I hate most of this are scope determination (if it's not development) and getting all the players to actually pay attention.
This week is scope. Next week is team.
My head isn't hurting right this minute. I consider this a sign to take that e-mail off the printer and start marking it up.
Oh, god. I don't know how I convinced myself to come to work today. Maybe I was delirious?
I may need to take more Sudafed before I can make that WTF?! call to DC.
I swear to god. WTF?