I haven't tried this AM, Cindy, so I just did, and it's working fine. Maybe try in a different browser, if it's a caching problem?
I just started my morning by watching a
My Name is Earl
episode, which put a big smile on my face even though I've seen it at least twice before. I'm definitely going to get the DVD set this fall, among other features, it'll have commentary on the "Mother's Day" episode by the mothers of Jason Lee, Ethan Suplee and the director. :-)
It seems to be up now, Theo. I wasn't having trouble loading anything else. Maybe the goat just needed coffee.
My Name is Earl
is a really cute show. I started watching it because Cashmere was so enthusiastic about it. I don't seem to enjoy watching re-runs, though. My pocketbook is grateful for that, especially since I fell in love with
Scrubs
this year, and have to catch up on four seasons' worth. Still, I bet the commentary by the moms is going to be worth the price of the DVDs.
Comedy Central is starting to run Scrubs, I think, so maybe you can hold off on those?
Oh, that's true -- I meant to mention that here! I don't believe I ever saw much of the first season, so it will be nice to be able to catch it all over again.
Which reminds me that I have the DVDs for
The Office
S1, which I still haven't watched. That's another fascinating series that I didn't bother to try, even though it ran directly after
My Name is Earl
... I guess the directorial styles of the two shows are so different that I didn't want to try warpping my brain from one to the other unprepared.
What a relief, Matt. Continued improvement wishes for your dad.
My Name is Earl is a really cute show. I started watching it because Cashmere was so enthusiastic about it.
Best. Soundtrack. On. Television. Bar. None.
I dunno, Cashmere, there's the
Life on Mars
soundtrack -- but you're right, it's pretty awesome. Not a big surprise, some of the same production people used to work on
Malcolm in the Middle,
which also has a rocking good soundtrack.
Glad to hear your dad's better, Matt.
Might the hivemind know where I might buy a large turtle shell? Faux is fine, probably better for being guilt-free. I found a huge one on eBay but it's $100. My not-boyfriend has once again requested something eccentric for his birthday. I found him the brass diving helmet. I found the six-foot-tall jungle fetish mask. I found the elk skull. I found the full-size suit of armor and the sarcophagus, too, but I wasn't paying that much for a gift for someone I'm not still sleeping with.
Good news about your dad, Matt.
Fall resolution: watch Scrubs.
Zenkitty, that sounds like a crazy request. I'd be inclined to whip up some papier mache rather than spend any money at all.
I am aggravated this morning, thanks to my neighbor who woke me up -- specifically, on purpose -- at 2:30 in the morning. BAH.
Hopefully these aren't fighting words, but - can we please get over ourselves a little about 9/11?
Ray Nagin, unsurprisingly, said some things a little carelessly. (Being pressed on why NOLA isn't back up and running yet, he said, basically, New York's had five years and they haven't managed to fix a hole in the ground. Cue outrage.)
But now Russert is all "Can you answer this?
Do you
feel sorry for the families who lost people on 9/11?" The fuck?
Nagin needs to think before he speaks, for sure. And he was doing his best to put it in context, that it wasn't a slap at 9/11 or NYC, but just a [really stupid] way of illustrating how long and complicated a job it is to deal with catastrophic events. That conversation, definitely, was an appropriate line of questioning. But that? "So, to confirm for the American people, by 'hole in the ground', did you or did you not mean
'Osama Uber Alles'
?
I remember that day vividly, from hearing air sirens and watching people stream up 16th street away from the White House to watching the smoke from the Pentagon from my rooftop and waiting for the next strike to hit.
But I'm beyond over any insufficiently reverent reference to the events of that day being treated as apostasy.