You're not friends. You'll never be friends. You'll be in love till it kills you both.

Spike ,'Sleeper'


Natter 45: Smooth as Billy Dee Williams.  

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.


sarameg - Jul 31, 2006 9:00:20 am PDT #9506 of 10002

They also didn't really censor my reading much

Yeah, no reading censoring took place. Well, except of the put that book down right this minute and take out the trash! sort. I think I read Madame Bovary at 12. And Anna Karenina, and Vanity Fair. (they were in a collection my dad bought, so they are all sort of tied together in my head.)


Vortex - Jul 31, 2006 9:05:58 am PDT #9507 of 10002
"Cry havoc and let slip the boobs of war!" -- Miracleman

Yeah, in my house, the TV was on lockdown, but I could read anything I wanted.

Funny story about what scares kids: Went to see Star Wars when it came out. I remember the spaceship coming across the screen, everyone saying 'ooooh", and then the airlock blew and Darth Vader came through. I screamed and got under my seat.


Emily - Jul 31, 2006 9:06:10 am PDT #9508 of 10002
"In the equation E = mc⬧, c⬧ is a pretty big honking number." - Scola

My mother and grandmother once went to see a play and ended up sitting separately. My mother enjoyed it but was glad she hadn't been sitting next to her mother. My grandmother enjoyed it but said she was glad her mother wasn't there. I think you pretty much never get over that.


Ouise - Jul 31, 2006 9:12:14 am PDT #9509 of 10002
Socks are a running theme throughout the series. They are used as symbols of freedom, redemption and love.

When I was a kid, I wasn't allowed to watch The Flintstones - not because of the dinosaurs so much as because it gave the impression that the economic system had always been capitalism.

I'm pretty sure my parents were the only people in the neighbourhood to teach the kids they babysat about the concept of "property is theft".

Regarding scariness: my mother had to take my sister (RahRah) out of The Empire Strikes Back because she was terrified of ... Yoda.


Sophia Brooks - Jul 31, 2006 9:14:03 am PDT #9510 of 10002
Cats to become a rabbit should gather immediately now here

1. I was scared of the Disney Black Hole movie as a kid. I was lame.

2. I had little to no censorship of anything watched in the home or read. Hence the reading of Erica Jong novels in, like, 5th grade.

3. My friend's father wouldn't let her watch "The Facts of Life" because he thought it was dirty. Also the love boat. I think he never actually watched The Facts of Life.

4. I lived with both grandparents and my mother in a very small house in which the upstairs was unbareably hot to sleep in in the summer. My gradma and I both tended to stay up all night. Which is how I ended up watching Basic Instinct with her.

ETA:

I was also terrified of Grover, because he sang I'm so Blue and it made me tooo sad. I think it was my first experience of "watch from the hall"


brenda m - Jul 31, 2006 9:14:14 am PDT #9511 of 10002
If you're going through hell/keep on going/don't slow down/keep your fear from showing/you might be gone/'fore the devil even knows you're there

I wonder if I could set up an auto-response in my email so that everything that comes in, at least from certain people, gets hit with "did you check that on snopes?" before I have to go and do it myself.


tommyrot - Jul 31, 2006 9:15:12 am PDT #9512 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.

When I was a kid, I wasn't allowed to watch The Flintstones - not because of the dinosaurs so much as because it gave the impression that the economic system had always been capitalism.

Huh. I just can't imagine my parents... no.

We weren't allowed to watch Monty Python or SNL. I was also not allowed to read comics, especially Mad Magazine.

My Dad thought we watched too much TV, so for a while we were only allowed to watch TV on certain days of the week.


Trudy Booth - Jul 31, 2006 9:20:22 am PDT #9513 of 10002
Greece's financial crisis threatens to take down all of Western civilization - a civilization they themselves founded. A rather tragic irony - which is something they also invented. - Jon Stewart

Funny story about what scares kids: Went to see Star Wars when it came out. I remember the spaceship coming across the screen, everyone saying 'ooooh", and then the airlock blew and Darth Vader came through. I screamed and got under my seat.

Mom was really strict but she goofed with that one. "My seven year old does not need to see a movie with WAR right in the title." I didn't see it until the re-release when Empire came out.

My mother and grandmother once went to see a play and ended up sitting separately. My mother enjoyed it but was glad she hadn't been sitting next to her mother. My grandmother enjoyed it but said she was glad her mother wasn't there. I think you pretty much never get over that.

Hee. We once saw a friend of mine off-broadway and naked for several hours. She kept poking my sister in the arm saying, "isn't this funny? Isn't this funny?!?!?!" and my sister finally groweled "Mom, I'm trying to pretend you aren't HERE"


bon bon - Jul 31, 2006 9:24:41 am PDT #9514 of 10002
It's five thousand for kissing, ten thousand for snuggling... End of list.

OMG, I missed the original story that Mel Gibson was working on a project about the Holocaust: [link]


Zenkitty - Jul 31, 2006 9:24:43 am PDT #9515 of 10002
Every now and then, I think I might actually be a little odd.

The only thing I ever remember my mom being uncertain about me watching was Maude. Of course, I watched it anyway, and at the time I was young enough that I dind't even understand the stuff she was worried about exposing me to.

My reading was never censored at all, but I think it was just because my mother never read much, and so the concept of "bad books" probably didn't really exist to her. She was just so happy that I wanted to read! I read a lot of things kids aren't usually allowed to read.

The only thing I can remember being scared of in movies when I was little was Godzilla, and some horror movie with a guy cutting peoples' faces off, which for the longest time I thought was Dr. Zhivago.