Mal: Hell, this job I would pull for free. Zoe: Can I have your share? Mal: No. Zoe: If you die, can I have your share? Mal: Yes.

'The Train Job'


Coffee On My Monitor  

This thread is for Buffista quotage. Posts that are profound, witty, or otherwise deserving of immortality go here. This is also Shrift's source for the BRQG, so be aware that if your words end up here, they'll also end up there. Finally, please note which thread spawned the quotage and please white-out anything that might be spoilery to Un-Americans.


John H - Dec 04, 2002 9:12:36 pm PST #1148 of 10000

§ ita § - Dec 04, 2002 9:13:15 pm PST #1149 of 10000
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

????

Who's in the wrong thread?


DavidS - Dec 04, 2002 9:20:03 pm PST #1150 of 10000
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

I went to edit and somebody (looks itaward) had stompied the power of S all over those paragraphs.

Thessaly En Fuego!

Thessaly: I've decided the FE looked in the back of 'Betty Crocker'

Victor: Oh no! That means the only ones the Slayer can turn to for help are... THE IRON CHEFS!!!

thessaly: Hey, they get all the cool knives. None of that badly-spaced-sigil muck if they were working for the FE! I bet they'd carve Spike into decorative rosettes and place them all around the Unisex Salmon ice cream.


DavidS - Dec 04, 2002 10:13:56 pm PST #1151 of 10000
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

John H. rips a COMMable quote into the alley:

Hmm, can anyone name another narrative where the sexy brooding romantic hero isn't acceptable to the heroine until he's been symbolically castrated? Only this one was full of symbolic-castration gags?

MR ROCHESTER: I don't understand. This sort of thing's never happened to me before. (He's sitting on JANE EYRE's bed.)

JANE EYRE: Maybe you were nervous.

MR ROCHESTER: I felt all right when I started. Let's try again. (He tries to lock her in the attic and draws back immediately. He tries again and the same thing happens.) Ow! Oh! Ow! Damn it! (He gets up and kicks the dresser. He starts to pace around the room.)

JANE EYRE: Maybe you're trying too hard. Doesn't this happen to every romantic-novel hero?

MR ROCHESTER: Not to me, it doesn't!

JANE EYRE: It's me, isn't it?

MR ROCHESTER: What are you talking about?

JANE EYRE: I--I... You didn't want to lock me in your attic. I just happened to be around.

MR ROCHESTER: Piffle!

JANE EYRE: I know I'm not the kind of girl romantic-novel heroes like to lock in their attics. It's always like, "ooh, you're like a sister to me," or, "oh, you're such a good friend."

MR ROCHESTER: Don't be ridiculous. I'd lock you up in my attic in a heartbeat.

JANE EYRE: Really?


Betsy HP - Dec 05, 2002 10:03:36 am PST #1152 of 10000
If I only had a brain...

Madrigal in Natter:

Yeah, but cold's got that whole bleakness of entropy and death thing about it. I mean, one of the main necessities for life is heat, and evolution considered the ability to generate it to be a vital achievement. Cold is all about the fear - the dark basement, the vampire, the zombie - heat is about comfort and security - the hug, the fireplace, the coffee. It's why Jack London wrote "To Build a Fire" and not "To Build an Air-Conditioner or its 19th Century Equivalent."


bon bon - Dec 05, 2002 10:38:12 am PST #1153 of 10000
It's five thousand for kissing, ten thousand for snuggling... End of list.

Madrigal in Natter:

Last night, after watching Hobbits slash themselves (somewhere in a fic Merry and Pippin are waxing each other's chests), I got to spend some quality time on the bathroom floor, trying to get the ear medicine in to at least slightly open my "dysfunctional" eustachian tube, all the while listening to the Super Mario Bros. soundtrack, reading a prof's comments on my paper proposal about Skamania Legionella species which accidentally included an essay I wrote for another class on how the films of Dolly Parton could represent a microcosm of American regionalism, with a focus on "The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas" all the while wondering if there was a way to tell a hairdresser I wanted Faith's haircut in Season 3 of Buffy:the Vampire Slayer without seeming too fangirly. And then there was this sinking feeling that I am just entirely over-geeking this whole geek thing.


Jessica - Dec 05, 2002 12:28:32 pm PST #1154 of 10000
And then Ortus came and said "It's Ortin' time" and they all Orted off into the sunset

Emily, in Natter:

I've got an uncle lives in Texas...

But that's more of a country song than a hitman recommendation.


Trudy Booth - Dec 05, 2002 12:28:36 pm PST #1155 of 10000
Greece's financial crisis threatens to take down all of Western civilization - a civilization they themselves founded. A rather tragic irony - which is something they also invented. - Jon Stewart

Cashmere:

The reason I like Winter better than Summer: When it's cold, you can always put on more clothes, wrap up in a cozy quilt, throw another log on the fire. In the Summer, when it's hot and humid as hell, you can only get so naked.


Trudy Booth - Dec 05, 2002 12:37:59 pm PST #1156 of 10000
Greece's financial crisis threatens to take down all of Western civilization - a civilization they themselves founded. A rather tragic irony - which is something they also invented. - Jon Stewart

JessPMoon:

Hazelnuts are yucky. All you hazelnut-loving freaks are wrong wrong wrong, wronger than a Parker/Riley sandwich with hazelnuts in it.


bon bon - Dec 05, 2002 12:57:21 pm PST #1157 of 10000
It's five thousand for kissing, ten thousand for snuggling... End of list.

Miracleman in natter:

I just keep wanting them to go further and further until it ends up with "Who Wants To Marry A Real Live Messiah?" and then they "pull the rug from under" the lucky finalist by having the "Messiah" punch them in the mouth repeatedly with brass knuckles. Yuks galore!! A sure-fire ratings winner! Fun for the whole family!