Congratulations to the class of 1999. You all proved more or less adequate.

Snyder ,'Chosen'


Spike's Bitches 36: Did I Sully Our Good Name?  

[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risque (and frisque), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.


Laura - Jul 12, 2007 8:15:30 am PDT #6118 of 10001
Our wings are not tired.

Good to read that the back is behaving, Cash.

Looked at links. Very attractive chair. Lovely family photo. Sucks that the family was gathered for a sad event, but the family portrait really came out well.


vw bug - Jul 12, 2007 8:15:45 am PDT #6119 of 10001
Mostly lurking...

My PCP stalks me on the hospital's computer system.

Case in point...I had a nutritionist appointment on Tuesday where I found out I'd lost 3.5 pounds in the last month. Today I get a note from my PCP congratulating me on my weight loss. Freaky. In a goodish way.


Connie Neil - Jul 12, 2007 8:17:36 am PDT #6120 of 10001
brillig

My mother desperately hoped my sisters and I would watch Mr. Rogers, but he creeped out all of us and we'd start to cry when he came on. Thank god for Captain Kangaroo.


juliana - Jul 12, 2007 8:21:25 am PDT #6121 of 10001
I’d be lying if I didn’t say that I miss them all tonight…

Tom, thanks for that link. I loved Mr. Rogers.

Cashmere, I'm very glad to hear your back is doing better. It's such a tricky thing, the back!


Laura - Jul 12, 2007 8:23:28 am PDT #6122 of 10001
Our wings are not tired.

I loved Captain Kangaroo as a child. My mother still gets reminded that she took away my Captain when she put me in morning school. Um, no VCR in the 50s.

From Tom's Mr. Rogers link, see me melt in awwww

15. The sweaters. Every one of the cardigans he wore on the show had been hand-knit by his mother.


vw bug - Jul 12, 2007 8:26:35 am PDT #6123 of 10001
Mostly lurking...

I just got my household porn catalog. I NEED the Recharge Station/Whiteboard: [link]


beekaytee - Jul 12, 2007 8:27:17 am PDT #6124 of 10001
Compassionately intolerant

I can't even think about Mr. Rogers for too long or I get all teary at how thoroughly, down to the bone decent he was, and how that decency was a kind of genius.

JZ speaks my heart.

One of my marathon training team members brought up the Rogers haters last Saturday. Totally random and upsetting.

As I've probably said a hundred times here, an ex-BF and his da both worked at WQED in Pittsburgh and introduced me to Fred in passing. He exuded grace (in the spiritual sense) and the down to the bone decency of which JZ spoke. Just an amazingly real fellow. Did he snap at the staff sometimes, why yes he did. Was he a person with his own issues (his kids troubles, as mentioned), why yes he was. BUT, he was a man who lived his convictions more fully than anyone I've ever even heard of.

I get the schmarm affect, but I also chalk that up to the era and production values.


amych - Jul 12, 2007 8:29:44 am PDT #6125 of 10001
Now let us crush something soft and watch it fountain blood. That is a girlish thing to want to do, yes?

Some idiotic bloviator, possibly for the Washington Post but I'm too lazy and too irritated by the bloviating to double-check

WSJ -- and true to form for their opinions page, it was basically using the Mr. Rogers rant as the hook for yet another round of the same old bloviating about how everything that's wrong with our society is the fault of the damn liberals and their damn feel-good 1970s. Little to no actual Rogers content, and I wouldn't even give them the excuse to pump up their hit count.


javachik - Jul 12, 2007 8:32:03 am PDT #6126 of 10001
Our wings are not tired.

I NEED the Recharge Station/Whiteboard:

That's pretty cool.


Vortex - Jul 12, 2007 8:33:48 am PDT #6127 of 10001
"Cry havoc and let slip the boobs of war!" -- Miracleman

My father wouldn't let my brother watch Mr. Rogers because he thought that he was gay and would be a bad influence on my brother. Seriously. Thankfully, dad has matured.