can't tell if Sean is being purposefully obtuse in the face of a Buffy quote for extra irony, or if he just missed it entirely. The crowd holds its breath...
Der. Right, wasn't there some show we were all big fans of at some point? Missed the reference entirely.
Though it was fun watching everyone turn blue for a minute there.
In concert, Lucy Kaplansky frequently sings her father's song about pi:
[link]
Steph, thanks for the link to the pi day cards! Mine are sent!
For the record, I
t heart
juliana, Nicole, Jess, and Katefate, who all sent me Pi Day cards. (I listed you in the order that I received them, to be equitable in my
t heart
-ing-ness.)
Apple Offering Full Length Movie on iTunes: >[link]
Sounds like just one, for now....
Drive by with links. This is probably something I'm eventually going to be outraged by, but right now, have admit my first reaction was "Cyborg Insects! Cool!".
[link]
Also, it appears that Claude Allen (Bush advisor who was caught shoplifting) may make a real life use of the "evil twin" defense based on actually having an evil twin.
[link]
Ginger, cool! LK fan here, although I've never heard her live. She's coming to Madison in May - hope she sings it.
Feel the Pi Day Love!
eta: Snickering at the seaman convo.
I love LK's singing her father's songs and talking about him. She has yet to put the songs on an album, though. I'll be seeing her here in April.
And also? "What's a stevedore?"
A dock worker who loads and unloads cargo.
Hee. But since we're answering questions, what's the difference between a stevedore and a longshoreman? Besides the hat, I guess.
Damn, I wish I had an evil twin I could blame for shit...
what's the difference between a stevedore and a longshoreman? Besides the hat, I guess.
I would have said that a stevedore does the loading and unloading, while a longshoreman moves stuff around the dock, but I would have been wrong. At least according to Mirriam-Webster online, which gives the same definition for both words -- someone who loads and unloads cargo on a dock.