I wonder how I may sound
wonders how expensive it would be to speak to Nilly on the phone and find out
Giles ,'Selfless'
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I wonder how I may sound
wonders how expensive it would be to speak to Nilly on the phone and find out
Harris Yulin doesn't sound even remotely British to my ears. I had explained him to myself as a Yank addition to the COW.
Is he the guy who played Quentin Travers? Because me too.
Oh, and I've never heard an American do a remotely credible Australian accent.
Actually, one of the reasons I've seen put forward for England currently being terrible at cricket is that English kids no longer do this, because their parents are too paranoid to let them out of the house.
The only baseball American kids seem to play any more is organized Little League, for the same reasons. Parents want to know where there kids are at all times. In fact if they don't know, the media labels them bad parents.
I love living in a neighbourhood where kids play on the streets. It's so cute! They're like little urchins or something!
And while we're talking about Spike's bad American, that sounds like mock-Somerset to me, with the very extended R and odd vowels.
Except Spike's bad American? Pretty much how he seems to talk. It is very strange.
I also get mistaken for Canadian all the time, but I don't know why. I think it is just stupid people who think I must be foreign when I speak in a precise manner.
I love living in a neighbourhood where kids play on the streets. It's so cute! They're like little urchins or something!
Whereabouts in Melbourne are you, Angus? We had that at our old place (MIll Park), it was a newer suburb with a brand new primary school and had a lot of families with young kids.
North Melbourne, billytea. (Which does always make me wince somewhat and pray none of the kids steps on a syringe...but, you know, all part of the vibrant inner-city colour.)
North Melbourne, billytea. (Which does always make me wince somewhat and pray none of the kids steps on a syringe...but, you know, all part of the vibrant inner-city colour.)
Yeah, there is that. Not sure it's just inner-city suburbs anymore. So do you support North Melbourne in the AFL?
Certainly not! I hate North Melbourne, although not quite so much now that Wayne Carey has departed. I'm a Melbourne supporter.
When I was a kid we came home from school, dumped our books, changed out of our uniforms, and out we went with the understanding we weren't to come back until dinner. No video games yet so we played stickball, sat on the stairs talking, and street games like Red Rover and Ali Baba and stoopball and ring-o-leaveo. There were less cars on the streets, because most families had one and Dad took it to work and brought it back at night.
Where was this paradise? Well, Fort Apache itself, the Bronx in the 1970's. Albeit a relatively safe neighborhood. We're always hearing here about how peaceful and safe Europe is compared to America, so I was surprised to hear about England.
This was in my local paper a few weeks ago. Hands up billytea, Angus if any resonates with you.
Congratulations are in order if you spent your childhood in the 1960's, 70's or even early 80's. Looking back, it's hard to believe we have lived as long as we have, because:
This generation has produced some of the best risk-takers and problem solvers and inventors, ever.
The past 50 years has been an explosion of innovation and new ideas.
You had freedom, failure, success and responsibility, and you learned how to deal with it all. And you're one of them. Congratulations! Hear, hear!
edited to show correct quoting