And in adorable news, I took some home videos this weekend.
Natter 56: ...we need the writers.
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.
Dead of the cute. He's such a talker, Jess!
Is it Legos birthday or something? I always miss the logos unless someone points them out because of iGoogle, too.
Is it Legos birthday or something? I always miss the logos unless someone points them out because of iGoogle, too.50th anniversary of Lego.
Well, there you go. How cool.
H&M is celebrating their 65th anniversary, and they're giving Fossil watches with the H&M logo to all of their employees. (I'm one.) Which seems awfully nice to me. Less nice is the fact that apparently they're already available on eBay.
Did people watch the SAG awards? I seriously love award shows, but so sad this had no red carpet coverage (except horrible TV Guide channel) and then the awards - iugh - I think on the whole people looked bad - no ties, weird dresses, messy hair. Then there were old actors seeming confused and frail. And the Daniel Day Lewis paying homage to Heath Leadger in his acceptance speech which seemed odd. The whole thing was a mess.
Dinosaur cartoon (no, not that one) for kids: [link]
Explains how dinosaurs were originally good (and vegetarian) but because of Man's sin, dinosaurs became evil.
It came from here [link] which explains how 'Darwinism' is a religion and science really isn't scientific.
...though most people, including scientists, consider the biblical teaching of origins to be religious and consider evolutionary ideas scientific, we should challenge such a view. In the secular media, for instance, the debate is often described as “creationism vs. evolution,” as if the “ism” should not apply to “evolution.” This is not accurate, because believing in evolution, like believing in creation, requires acceptance of a certain presuppositional dogma and requires placing one’s faith in a story about the unrepeatable past. See Science or the Bible?
Also, the term “religion” must be defined clearly. While beliefs and worship practices, procedures, and conduct are involved in religion, any belief system that purports to be a total explanation of reality is more-or-less religion. Thus, insofar as it is an attempt to explain why the world is the way it is, held to with ardor and faith, Darwinian evolution can thus be considered religion.
Oh, my god, Monday. No. No, no, no.
Did anyone else watch Mansfield Park tonight? Am I alone in thinking it really boring and weird with total charisma vacuums instead of actors?
I haven't watched yet but that's too bad. I thought last week's Northanger Abbey was pretty fun. The actor who played Henry Tilney reminded me of Lee Pace kind of. With the crinkley eye smile. Nice!
I don't think my brain is awake enough to fully appreciate the horror that is Monday....
Oh, my god, Monday. No. No, no, no.
My Monday (so far; all of this occurred before 9:30):
*spilled coffee on my white shirt before I ever got out of the car;
*got to work to find that the server is frelled again;
*got to work to find -- through backchannel, NOT through a memo from higher-ups -- that our health insurance is changing at the end of the week (no, we don't know to what company; no, we don't know if our doctors are covered; no, we don't know if our prescriptions are covered).
Apparently the dude who is our contractor for health insurance called *some* of the employees at home this weekend to ask them what meds they were on, what doctors they saw, etc. -- presumably to have a list to work against when picking new insurance -- and, when the employees asked WHY Dude was asking (because, yo, HIPAA), Dude mentioned that our insurance will be changing. At the end of the WEEK.
But Dude didn't bother to call everyone at home, so now we're all buzzing with hearsay and fearmongering.
I expect the snakes to come through the ceiling any moment.