Where's Bush's clock?" asked Rumsfeld. "Bush's clock is in Jesus' office. He's using it as a ceiling fan."
Yeah, with John Howard's waiting nearby as a backup.
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Where's Bush's clock?" asked Rumsfeld. "Bush's clock is in Jesus' office. He's using it as a ceiling fan."
Yeah, with John Howard's waiting nearby as a backup.
Yeah, with John Howard's waiting nearby as a backup.
sorta ... it's in Jesus' dog's kennel
lmao!
COME ONE COME ALL TO THE 2004 FACE TO FACE
In the F2F thread we are wrapping up the discussion on where next years gathering will be. The vote will be Friday.
At the moment we are pretty much between Baltimore/DC and Montreal. Please come and join the discussion!
Did I already post the link to this collection of Dr. Who related music?
As a tangent to that, there's a DJ Sutekh (Seth Horvitz) whose name I'm pretty sure is taken from the "Pyramids of Mars" Dr Who episode.
t waves to plasmo I remember Pyramids of Mars being one of the scariest (and also trippiest) Tom Baker stories.
As a tangent to that, there's a DJ Sutekh (Seth Horvitz) whose name I'm pretty sure is taken from the "Pyramids of Mars" Dr Who episode.
Possible, but Sutekh is a long-standing alternative name for the Egyptian god Set. It need not have gone through Dr Who.
I remember Pyramids of Mars being one of the scariest (and also trippiest) Tom Baker stories.
It was a good one. I loved all the Egyptian touches, and it also had the Doctor showing no compassion for a murdered man, and a trip forward in time to reveal the dead world Earth would become if they didn't intervene.
My favourite adventure from that season (and for a long time my fave of all time), however, was Seeds of Doom. Which I didn't catch when the local public TV station played it last year, as they stuffed around with the scheduled time.
ETA: this site suggests that high regards for The Pyramids of Mars is a pretty widely held view.
I posted this question in Natter, but it occured to me that this might be a better place to find an answer to this question:
Is it:
"Many a muckle makes a mickle?"
Or
"Many a mickle makes a muckle?"
It googles both ways, and the online dictionaries show both "muckle" and "mickle" as meaning "a great many".