Everything looks good from here... Yes. Yes, this is a fertile land, and we will thrive. We will rule over all this land, and we will call it... 'This Land.' I think we should call it 'your grave!' Ah, curse your sudden but inevitable betrayal! Ha ha HA! Mine is an evil laugh! Now die! Oh, no, God! Oh, dear God in heaven!

Wash ,'Serenity'


The Great Write Way  

A place for Buffistas to discuss, beta and otherwise deal and dish on their non-fan fiction projects.


Beverly - Jun 03, 2004 5:40:37 pm PDT #5070 of 10001
Days shrink and grow cold, sunlight through leaves is my song. Winter is long.

Freeman was also Mel Mounds of the Round Sound and Vincent the Vegetable Vampire. IJS.

My kids would get all hyper over Sesame Street, and then calm down for Mr. Rogers.

An odd note: my grandmother scolded me harshly for letting my impressionable little boys watch that horrible Sesame Street with all that dashing around and those ugly, horrid puppet monsters. Watching that trash was going to warp their little psyches.

I was nonplussed until I realized that she was firmly in the "pretty is as pretty does" generation, where beautiful was equated with good, and ugly with bad, and the generalized versions of both beautiful and pretty were accepted. It made me a little sad.

But not sad enough to keep from telling her sharply she wasn't allowed to malign their beloved shows to my kids.

it is my goal today to make a single post on this board that I don't have to go back and rescue in one way or another in edit. Humph.


Hil R. - Jun 03, 2004 5:44:01 pm PDT #5071 of 10001
Sometimes I think I might just move up to Vermont, open a bookstore or a vegan restaurant. Adam Schlesinger, z''l

No idea what Square One TV is/was.

It was a math show, for elementary school kids, in the mid to late eighties, and maybe early nineties. They'd have music segments, and some other little things, and an ongoing Dragnet parody called Mathnet (with Sergeant Monday) where the detectives would have to use different math skills to solve the crimes. (And it was usually something interesting, like breaking a code, not just arithmetic.)


Polter-Cow - Jun 03, 2004 5:58:55 pm PDT #5072 of 10001
What else besides ramen can you scoop? YOU CAN SCOOP THIS WORLD FROM DARKNESS!

Dragnet parody called Mathnet (with Sergeant Monday) where the detectives would have to use different math skills to solve the crimes. (And it was usually something interesting, like breaking a code, not just arithmetic.)

And Kate Friday! I think that's where I learned about the Fibonacci sequence. And that's definitely where I learned that all area codes (until they ran out) had a 0 or 1 in the middle.


Pix - Jun 03, 2004 6:34:12 pm PDT #5073 of 10001
The status is NOT quo.

I love Square One! And Sesame Street! But P-C, the Bloodhound Gang was on 3-2-1-CONTACT! (which I also loved).

Ehm.

The Electric Company caused me childhood trauma. Seriously. Some rocket surgeon writer over there decided it would be a great idea to retell the famous fairytale...I think it's "Bluebeard's Wife"? The one where the guy gives his wife keys to the house and says to go into any room except one, and when she finally succumbs to curiousity, she discovers the mangled dead bodies of all his former wives who looked in that room? Yeah. That one.

Well to their credit, they didn't have the mangled dead wives. However, they did have something--which my three-year-old brain registered as a hideous crazy monster beast head thing--pop through the door and chase the wife out of the house.

I kid you not. I saw this when I was three, and I still get the heebie jeebies thinking about it. If I saw it now, I would probably realize it wasn't all that bad, but it was very intense for a toddler.

However, I am totally with Deb et al in the hatred of most of the new kids' tv shows:

Where in sweet fuck are they coming up with the ideas for these things?!?

is the best possible way of describing my feelings about them, too. Has anyone else made the mistake of poking their heads into what's on in the afternoon for cartoons for older kids? Dear god. Twisted.And.Fucking.Scary.

In older thread news, I'm glad my drabble made you smile! Also, Deb? You are right on in your characterization of the narrator.


Polter-Cow - Jun 03, 2004 6:43:36 pm PDT #5074 of 10001
What else besides ramen can you scoop? YOU CAN SCOOP THIS WORLD FROM DARKNESS!

I love Square One! And Sesame Street! But P-C, the Bloodhound Gang was on 3-2-1-CONTACT! (which I also loved).

Oh duh. Cause it was also in the magazine, until they replaced it with something far inferior, whatever it was.


Connie Neil - Jun 03, 2004 6:43:51 pm PDT #5075 of 10001
brillig

Mathnet also appeals to grownups. Though I was too busy looking for the UST between the two detectives. I'm a sick, sick woman. Fibonacci sequence, yeah. Which I never did see the point of. How sad is that, that a grade school TV show had math toughter than I could grok.


Hil R. - Jun 03, 2004 6:49:13 pm PDT #5076 of 10001
Sometimes I think I might just move up to Vermont, open a bookstore or a vegan restaurant. Adam Schlesinger, z''l

Cause it was also in the magazine, until they replaced it with something far inferior, whatever it was.

They replaced it with that time travel thing. I don't remember what it was called. The main characters were named Jenny and Sean, and their time-travel thing was never described as anything other than "the tachyon device." Time Team? Something like that? They met Da Vinci once.

You know, I could really use the brain space storing that information for much more useful purposes.


Polter-Cow - Jun 03, 2004 6:50:37 pm PDT #5077 of 10001
What else besides ramen can you scoop? YOU CAN SCOOP THIS WORLD FROM DARKNESS!

The main characters were named Jenny and Sean, and their time-travel thing was never described as anything other than "the tachyon device." Time Team? Something like that? They met Da Vinci once.

Oh!! I take it back. I loved that shit.


Katie M - Jun 03, 2004 6:54:59 pm PDT #5078 of 10001
I was charmed (albeit somewhat perplexed) by the fannish sensibility of many of the music choices -- it's like the director was trying to vid Canada. --loligo on the Olympic Opening Ceremonies

It was a math show, for elementary school kids, in the mid to late eighties, and maybe early nineties. They'd have music segments, and some other little things, and an ongoing Dragnet parody called Mathnet (with Sergeant Monday) where the detectives would have to use different math skills to solve the crimes. (And it was usually something interesting, like breaking a code, not just arithmetic.)

Speaking of crazy coincidences... You too can download parts of old Mathnet episodes!

George Frankly! Aww. Love him.


Polter-Cow - Jun 03, 2004 6:58:50 pm PDT #5079 of 10001
What else besides ramen can you scoop? YOU CAN SCOOP THIS WORLD FROM DARKNESS!

Katie, you just got back all your cool cred.