Well sometimes it's hard to get drapes to match hardwood floors.
he said hardwood
snerk
Oz ,'Beneath You'
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.
Well sometimes it's hard to get drapes to match hardwood floors.
he said hardwood
snerk
I gave up on any pretense of not being 12 a long time ago. Thank doG Kristin puts up with me.
Sometimes I like to try acting as if I'm not a twelve-year-old boy.
ND has no problem playing this role for you. Or anyone, really.
ETA: Ah, x-posty.
Disney is thinking about releasing "Song of the South" in the U.S. on video for the first time ever.
When did "tar baby" become something other than an attractive lure that's going to entangle you into something nasty?
Well, I do spend a lot of time acting like a precocious twelve-year-old boy. But I was just working on my taxes earlier, and I didn't want to give myself puerile whiplash.
When did "tar baby" become something other than an attractive lure that's going to entangle you into something nasty?
It's always been a racially loaded epithet.
It's always been a racially loaded epithet.
I guess the fact that I grew up in a 98% white environment buffered me from that sort of stuff. The tar baby was only ever that thing that was going to wind you up in the briar patch, B'rer Rabbit.
I don't know about always -- according to Wikipedia, the first time it was used in the US was in a Harper's Weekly story (Joel Chandler Harris was actually second with it) loosely derived from a Ghanian Anansi story, with exactly the meaning connie describes. The meaning has morphed since then, but it does seem to have been originally just one plot-central but racially neutral element of a longer trickster tale.
Kat and Lori, all the best to you and Noah and Grace.
Here's a nice, clear source as well: [link]
(And I just noticed that that entry was the "word of the day" on my birthday. Not sure how I feel about that.)