Can't even shout, Can't even cry. The Gentlemen are coming by. Looking in windows, knocking on doors. They need to take seven, and they might take yours. Can't call to mom, can't say a word. You're gonna die screaming but you won't be heard.

Dream Girl ,'Bring On The Night'


Natter 60: Gone In 60 Seconds  

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.


Toddson - Jul 28, 2008 1:08:22 pm PDT #41 of 10003
Friends don't let friends read "Atlas Shrugged"

From that description, I don't know if there's enough money in the world for that job. It's basically 24/7 for what sounds like a bunch of overprivileged brats (of various ages ... and species).


§ ita § - Jul 28, 2008 1:08:53 pm PDT #42 of 10003
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Oh, I thought of you especially over the weekend, msbelle, as I huddled in my darkened cave. I was watching an episode of The Outer Limits where NF plays the Bogart character in an SF Casablanca (the Nazis are aliens) and he wears lots of smudged eyeliner.

I shouldn't have deleted it.


Scrappy - Jul 28, 2008 1:09:54 pm PDT #43 of 10003
Life moves pretty fast. You don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it.

Speaking of laundry, I remember my dad telling me that when he was in college, everyone mailed their laundry home and they had special boxes for it. Your mom (or the maid) would do it and mail it back to you. There was even a special postal rate for it. I had never heard of this, but it was apparently common practice. Oh, that damn Greatest Generation and their lazy laundry-mailing ways. Why, when I was in school, we had to do our OWN laundry, and carry it there ourselves!

[link]


Calli - Jul 28, 2008 1:25:17 pm PDT #44 of 10003
I must obey the inscrutable exhortations of my soul—Calvin and Hobbs

I remember my dad telling me that when he was in college, everyone mailed their laundry home and they had special boxes for it. Your mom (or the maid) would do it and mail it back to you.

I'm trying to imagine my mom's reaction if I'd tried to do this. I suspect that I would have heard the laughter from 60 miles away, followed by a rain of dirty clothes, drop-kicked back from same.


Toddson - Jul 28, 2008 1:25:29 pm PDT #45 of 10003
Friends don't let friends read "Atlas Shrugged"

When I was in college one of the boys would take his laundry home (he had a month's worth of underwear) for his mother's maid to wash (yes, overprivileged). Most had to learn to do their own laundry and, trust me, there are few things more amusing than watching someone having to learn to do laundry for the first time (splotchy colored underwear! often pink!).

eta: when I was in college, my mother would bitch if I brought laundry home to wash myself (mom had pretty much stopped doing laundry at that point, working on the assumption that with two daughters, she could pass that little chore on to the next generation).


Kathy A - Jul 28, 2008 1:26:30 pm PDT #46 of 10003
We're very stretchy. - Connie Neil

Here's an interesting article on the Obama tabloid strategy--how they're using People, Star, Us, etc., magazines to make the Obama family more approachable to the voter.


msbelle - Jul 28, 2008 1:27:36 pm PDT #47 of 10003
I remember the crazy days. 500 posts an hour. Nubmer! Natgbsb

I'm not sure I want NF in eyeliner. What I was contemplated earlier today was NF having a guest spot on FNL and I nearly LOST MY SHIT.


Kathy A - Jul 28, 2008 1:28:07 pm PDT #48 of 10003
We're very stretchy. - Connie Neil

I remember having to show a dorm-mate how to fold a contour sheet the first week of school freshman year. Her mom had shown her how to do the actual laundry (complete with written instructions), but she was clueless when it came to folding.


beth b - Jul 28, 2008 1:28:42 pm PDT #49 of 10003
oh joy! Oh Rapture ! I have a brain!

I just known Nannies in worse situations. Sadly,from China where they had to flee from there.Lot less money, all nanny/mommy duties and no full days off. Of course I've also known nannies in much better positions.

laundry mail - intriguing


msbelle - Jul 28, 2008 1:30:22 pm PDT #50 of 10003
I remember the crazy days. 500 posts an hour. Nubmer! Natgbsb

We started doing our own laundry at 4th grade for the express purpose of my mom "was not going to have kids who went off to college not knowing how to do their own laundry."

Someone chided me today for expecting mac to get himself ready in the mornings (dress, school bag, brush teeth). hell yes he will, 2nd grade is plenty old to do all that without multiple proddings.