Say! look at you! You look just like me! We're very pretty.

Buffybot ,'Dirty Girls'


Natter 48 Contiguous States of Denial  

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.


Amy - Nov 20, 2006 7:57:24 am PST #1479 of 10007
Because books.

Does Funny Farm load really slowly for everyone else? I'm going nuts here. Every time I guess, it takes forever to reload the page.


SailAweigh - Nov 20, 2006 8:00:54 am PST #1480 of 10007
Nana korobi, ya oki. (Fall down seven times, stand up eight.) ~Yuzuru Hanyu/Japanese proverb

I keep getting a connection error. It sounds like too many people are trying to play it at the same time. Hee.


Ailleann - Nov 20, 2006 8:01:21 am PST #1481 of 10007
vanguard of the socialist Hollywood liberal homosexualist agenda

It loads ok for me, but sometimes I get an error and have to go back to the "previous" page.

I was just wondering if we were slowing it down... no crashing the Farm!


sj - Nov 20, 2006 8:06:46 am PST #1482 of 10007
"There are few hours in life more agreeable than the hour dedicated to the ceremony known as afternoon tea."

Still nothing, Nicole.


Amy - Nov 20, 2006 8:07:14 am PST #1483 of 10007
Because books.

Uh oh. I just got a "too much traffic" error message, too.

Give me back my Funny Farm!


bon bon - Nov 20, 2006 8:14:03 am PST #1484 of 10007
It's five thousand for kissing, ten thousand for snuggling... End of list.

I cannot figure the connector between cowboy and slashdot.

While I'm at it, please help with Tom Cruise into the far left box.


tommyrot - Nov 20, 2006 8:14:12 am PST #1485 of 10007
Sir, it's not an offence to let your cat eat your bacon. Okay? And we don't arrest cats, I'm very sorry.

What happened before the Big Bang? String theory might have the answer....

Cosmologists Paul Steinhardt and Neil Turok have a radical idea that could wipe away these mysteries. They theorize that the cosmos was never compacted into a single point and did not spring forth in a violent instant. Instead, the universe as we know it is a small cross section of a much grander universe whose true magnitude is hidden in dimensions we cannot perceive. What we think of as the Big Bang, they contend, was the result of a collision between our three-dimensional world and another three-dimensional world less than the width of a proton away from ours—right next to us, and yet displaced in a way that renders it invisible. Moreover, they say the Big Bang is just the latest in a cycle of cosmic collisions stretching infinitely into the past and into the future. Each collision creates the universe anew. The 13.7-billion-year history of our cosmos is just a moment in this endless expanse of time.

Fun....

[link]


Nicole - Nov 20, 2006 8:17:15 am PST #1486 of 10007
I'm getting the pig!

bon bon, do you mean cowboyneal ?

sj, that's weird. I sent to gmail addy.


flea - Nov 20, 2006 8:17:17 am PST #1487 of 10007
information libertarian

I am eagerly awaiting the day when Eve loses her first tooth (yes, I know she's only 3) so I can use dollar coins under her pillow from the Tooth Fairy. (I'm planning in advance! It may take me 3 years to acquire a Susan B. or Sacajawea!)


bon bon - Nov 20, 2006 8:18:03 am PST #1488 of 10007
It's five thousand for kissing, ten thousand for snuggling... End of list.

Thanks, nicole, I needed to get rid of the space!