Oh, and the Big Name Publishing House wants to use Pete's art in the book, hurrah!
Twofer! Score!
I yelled at an AT&T CS rep today. I did apologize but I nearly had a heart attack when I opened the bill for $465--our old cell phones. They had charged us the early termination fee even after they said they wouldn't. The girl said she fixed it but I'll have to wait and see.
And the new cell bill has DH in the wrong plan (for $20 a month more than I agreed to). But I fixed that yesterday.
By the way, Jilli, I caught
Addams Family Values
on TV a few weeks ago and thought of you.
The girl said she fixed it but I'll have to wait and see.
All my Verizon nightmares just came flooding back. My fingers are crossed for you, Cashmere.
Hey, Plei? Remember how we were kvetching one day about Gen-X being completely passed over lately (in the context of that article about "Hallelujah")? Apparently, we are now Grups.
Think of it this way: For Gen-X, just fifteen years ago, the big complaint was that boomers, with their lingering sixties-era musical attachments and smug sense of cultural centrality, refused to pass the torch and get the hell out of the way. In a 1997 sociology essay titled “Generation X: Who Are They? What Do They Want?,” one twentysomething student lamented, “We still are bombarded with ‘Classic Rock’ and moldy oldies. Bands like the Eagles, Rolling Stones, and Aerosmith need to back off so we can define our own music, lifestyle.” It’s ironic, then, that those selfsame slackers—the twentysomethings of the early nineties (and, hey, I was right there, too: Rock on, Screaming Trees)—aren’t standing in the way of the next generation. Rather, they’re joining right in at the front of the crowd at the sold-out Decemberists show. Hey, kids, you can define your own music, lifestyle—that’s our music and lifestyle, too!
I find who (demographically) the article and pictures leave out telling, but it's interesting.
Ha! I often feel like somebody's mom at the shows I go to. Rock Gen-Xers!
Yogurt parfait:
Just read the first para and am laughing hysterically cause it's so true!
Ha! I often feel like somebody's mom at the shows I go to. Rock Gen-Xers!
Yeah. I think my sister and I were the two oldest people at the Fiery Furnaces show a month back....
Even I feel old at concerts, and I'm not all that old.
It is a story about 40-year-old men and women who look, talk, act, and dress like people who are 22 years old.
And why not, I say! I think this is a problem for my parents. They don't understand that, like, all my friends who are
even older
than me still act like I do. Like "a kid," or whatever. Apparently adults don't sit down and watch cartoons. I guess that's why M. Night Shyamalan is now a giant
Avatar
fanboy.
(Also, my uncle, when he saw me reading
Sandman,
said, and I quote, "Cartoons? At your age?")
I refuse to be an adult.
Excuse me while I get back to work with Buzz and Woody.