She's not just a blob of energy, she's also a 14-year-old hormone bomb.

Spike ,'The Killer In Me'


Natter Five-O: Book 'Em, Danno.  

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.


-t - Feb 20, 2007 7:45:30 am PST #2147 of 10001
I am a woman of various inclinations and only some of the time are they to burn everything down in frustration

I think any animal that you eat where the food is the name of the animal was poor people's food. If you call the food something else (like beef instead of cow), that was on the well-heeled menu. One of those things that made so much sense when I read it that I'll believe it whether it's really true or not.


tommyrot - Feb 20, 2007 7:45:46 am PST #2148 of 10001
Sir, it's not an offence to let your cat eat your bacon. Okay? And we don't arrest cats, I'm very sorry.

Protestants used margarine & Catholics used butter.

Heh. Unless your dad's a dairy farmer.


lisah - Feb 20, 2007 7:47:19 am PST #2149 of 10001
Punishingly Intricate

Heh. Unless your dad's a dairy farmer.

See! I was basing my beliefs on a sample of ONE family! But they were really the only Protestants I was close to growing up aside from some of my dad's family who also used margarine.


Amy - Feb 20, 2007 7:47:23 am PST #2150 of 10001
Because books.

My dad has an anti-Catholic bias, which is probably why I used to think Catholics are weird....

One of my best friends as a kid was Italian and Catholic, and I thought being Catholic (and Italian, actually) seemed so cool. They got to light candles! And have saints! And they did the whole traditional seafood supper on Christmas Eve, which fascinated me (pasta and sauce and FISH?! at Christmas?! which was for turkey and stuffing?!).

I still think the ritual of Catholicism must be very soothing -- the incense and the candles and the different saints to appeal to. There are absolutely no bells and whistles about being Presbyterian.


lisah - Feb 20, 2007 7:47:40 am PST #2151 of 10001
Punishingly Intricate

Heh. Unless your dad's a dairy farmer.

See! I was basing my beliefs on a sample of ONE family! But they were really the only Protestants I was close to growing up aside from some of my dad's family who also used margarine.


Liese S. - Feb 20, 2007 7:58:09 am PST #2152 of 10001
"Faded like the lilac, he thought."

But not both.

Bwah!

Dude, I'm totally not ready for Lent. I haven't even been thinking about it. Guess I need to figure out if I'm doing anything. Maybe I could, like, give up the idea of joining up my old game (at $50/month). Then after Lent, I could be all, hey, I have to celebrate, and join the game.

Hmm. Not really the spirit of the thing, I'm thinking.

We never observed Lent growing up. I only started to with one of my adult friends (who was Franciscan, like vow of poverty and the whole bit).


Nutty - Feb 20, 2007 8:01:01 am PST #2153 of 10001
"Mister Spock is on his fanny, sir. Reports heavy damage."

I think any animal that you eat where the food is the name of the animal was poor people's food. If you call the food something else (like beef instead of cow), that was on the well-heeled menu.

Well, but like, chitlins and haggis are definitley poor people's food (they're made of stomach, intestine -- basically, they are proto-hotdogs). And chitlins are not called pig-intestines; they are called chitlins.

Also, between mutton and lamb, mutton is definitely poorer -- being both tougher and gamier in taste -- but which one is the same name as the critter being et?

I think that the big three of animal protein -- chicken, beef and pork -- got all the names because they were eaten all the time in the history of the English language. Because seafood keeps so badly, people not actually living near the shore were very unlikely to eat seafood (unless it be smoked herring) until the invention of reliable refrigeration.

(Somehow, we have lost most of the chicken-words that used to exist: you see them in, like, Laura Ingalls Wilder books, about pullets and fryers, etc. I blame Frank Perdue.)


§ ita § - Feb 20, 2007 8:01:33 am PST #2154 of 10001
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Wow. That thing that just happened on Heroes was seriously joymaking.

Steph, I think you can justify anything pre-Lenten as Mardi Gras (or equivalent) if you're finishing off the good stuff before the abstinence kicks in. So if that means getting the champagne finished before midnight, so be it.

I'm not sure why I wasn't consulted on this tradition. I have lots of good ideas.


Aims - Feb 20, 2007 8:02:01 am PST #2155 of 10001
Shit's all sorts of different now.

That thing that just happened on Heroes was seriously joymaking.

Which thing?


§ ita § - Feb 20, 2007 8:04:53 am PST #2156 of 10001
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

between mutton and lamb, mutton is definitely poorer -- being both tougher and gamier in taste

Something's inverted about my taste buds. I can't deal with lamb because it's nasty stinky, but mutton is quite delish.