Natter 59: Dominate Your Face!
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.
The study did not compare the effects of bottled wine vs box wine.
But it's about the effects of resveratrol, which oxidizes quickly. So, if you're not drinking the whole bottle in, I think, about an hour, the resveratrol is gone. Boxed wine isn't exposed to the air until you pour a glass.
(I read an article about all that by a guy who doesn't like wine but started drinking one glass a day for the health benefits. Which convinced me to do the same. So go team boxed wine.)
I vote NO RIFS.
I must be behind on my corp-speak. All I see in this statement is that juliana firmly does not believe that Reading Is Fundamental.
Nah, javachik--I was in Dublin literally the week before the 2004 election (I voted absentee because I was coming back the day before the election and was afraid any issues with my plane might mean I'd not be home in time to vote!). And I got to meet Jars and see the museum with her!
Reduction in Force, Miracle Man
juliana firmly does not believe that Reading Is Fundamental.
MM, have you the brainworms? 'tis javachik using the corporate-speak.
(RIF=Reduction In Force, something I only know from reading Dilbert.)
HAPPY BIRTHDAY, DANA!!!!!
Jesse, didya know the organic milk lasts a whole hell of a lot longer than regular?
Huh, that's interesting. I don't know what went wrong this time, because I'm usually fine drinking a quart of milk in a week. Of course, you know what else lasts longer? Half and half.
Gotcha, Meara, I was there in August of 2004 and they wanted my opinion on the election something fierce. It was awesome. But it was also a little bit unnerving that the Irish seemed more interested in our election than some of the 'Mericans I knew did.
And I didn't get to see Jars, dammit.
I think ATK or CI did a thing on why organic milk lasts longer. Or someone. Anyway, there's a reason.
t /helpful
Happy birthday Dana!
Now With Extra Bolding and Bangs!!!
I hope that your coworkers leave you alone and shrift innundates your inbox with delectable porn.
ION, the orb! It burns! It's already crested the skylight at 9:45 and I'm freakin' blinded.
Hell, we could collaborate and you could have Laser Cats.
I'm not going to vote for this unless it's the Ministry of Cats With Frickin' Lasers On Their Heads.
Am now suffering from curry food coma. Zzzzzzzz
Is there a notation for writing down dances? Okay, maybe I should go further back. When Company B dances Swan Lake this year, how much like Swan Lake from Company A in 1956 is it? Tells the same story, probably. Has the same cast? Doing the same motions? In the same costumes? How much is traditional, reasonable variation? If it's close, how is it recorded?
For ita, from my former roommate:
The system for written recording of dances is called Labanotation (likely the best google term), studied at the Dance Notation Bureau (I think) and also the Dance Critics Association. The other issue is, of course, the modern ability to film dance and, for this, you might try looking at PBS Great Performances Dance Series. Film recording of dance tends to be a subject of debate—which angles are filmed, how do the filmmaker’s interpretation and the choreographer’s intention intersect? Finally, of course, dance reconstruction is done by dancers who worked with original choreographer or in early performances of a given work. For protégés of notable choreographers, this can be quite a career in itself—setting classic works on various dancers/companies—though, once again, the result is somewhat subjective. To answer the larger questions of comparison of various incarnation of a dance would be a master’s thesis if not a dissertation (or many).