Ten percent of nothing is -- let me do the math here -- nothing into nothing, carry the --

Jayne ,'Serenity'


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.


Kathy A - Sep 08, 2008 9:12:13 am PDT #7756 of 10003
We're very stretchy. - Connie Neil

"(I Can't) Breakaway" by Big Pig,

Awesome!

IMO, Big Pig's Bonk is one of the best albums of the past 20 years. Seriously. If I ever sang a slow rocker anywhere but my shower, especially for karaoke, I'd sing "Devil's Song."


Scrappy - Sep 08, 2008 9:12:32 am PDT #7757 of 10003
Life moves pretty fast. You don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it.

What about Crazy by Gnarls Barkley? Or (to go old-but-goofy)Uptown Girl by Billy Joel?


Sparky1 - Sep 08, 2008 9:14:03 am PDT #7758 of 10003
Librarian Warlord

any of the educational types around here ever heard of the People to People exchange program?

It's legit. The catch is, of course, that you have to pay for the trip somehow.

I did a quick search and don't see any lawsuits or bad press.


flea - Sep 08, 2008 9:19:07 am PDT #7759 of 10003
information libertarian

I posted to the list-serv for parents and grad student parents at work and disposed of an infant car seat, crib, and bouncer in about 3 hours, and had at least 6 people waiting as backups. Pregnant grad students LOVE free baby stuff.


Barb - Sep 08, 2008 9:20:24 am PDT #7760 of 10003
“Not dead yet!”

It's legit. The catch is, of course, that you have to pay for the trip somehow.

Yeah, figured as much. And of course, they would invite her to Australia. What I can't figure out from a cursory search of the site, is what criteria they used to invite her (if there is any). From what I can see, most kids can just apply to the program, but this came out of the blue, as an actual invitation, on really nice linen-weave paper.


lisah - Sep 08, 2008 9:21:39 am PDT #7761 of 10003
Punishingly Intricate

Or (to go old-but-goofy)Uptown Girl by Billy Joel?

ahahahahahah. I would be MURDERED by my best friend. There was a pet boutique in our neighborhood for a while (really out of place...it wasn't even a pet store! Just fancy pet clothes) called Uptown Dog. And every time we went past I'd sing Uptown Dog to the tune of Uptown Girl to make my friend NUTSO!

What about Crazy by Gnarls Barkley?

hmmmm I wonder if I could do it justice?


Frankenbuddha - Sep 08, 2008 9:21:47 am PDT #7762 of 10003
"We are the Goon Squad and we're coming to town...Beep! Beep!" - David Bowie, "Fashion"

Well, you've managed to replace "Fish Heads" with "Welcome to the Jungle" as earworm of today, so thank you.

Eat em up, yum!


Barb - Sep 08, 2008 9:26:29 am PDT #7763 of 10003
“Not dead yet!”

Wordplay just came up on iTunes. I could see that working well for karaoke (although I'm currently partial to "Butterfly" right now. I love that he wrote that song about a stripper.)

There's always Jimmy Buffet too-- Fins is always popular karaoke material around here.


Sparky1 - Sep 08, 2008 9:29:28 am PDT #7764 of 10003
Librarian Warlord

From what I can see, most kids can just apply to the program, but this came out of the blue, as an actual invitation, on really nice linen-weave paper.

I think kids are nominated, but then still have to go through an application process of some sort. [link]

We learn about many of these students through recommendations from teachers, school administrators, and Student Ambassador alumni. We find out about others through national academic listings. These are the same listings that top colleges and universities use to find their applicants.

Invited students are asked to submit letters of recommendation and participate in an interview with local delegation leaders to gain acceptance into the program.


Trudy Booth - Sep 08, 2008 9:29:49 am PDT #7765 of 10003
Greece's financial crisis threatens to take down all of Western civilization - a civilization they themselves founded. A rather tragic irony - which is something they also invented. - Jon Stewart

Annoyance of the day: I came back from lunch to find an email from my seatmate (we cover each other's phones for lunch and are supposed to never be gone at the same time) saying:

I would appreciate you sending me an email or writing me a note going forward whenever there are instructions and I'm on the phone. Thanks.

Which is a reasonable enough request except that... SHE WAS ON HER FOUR THOUSHNDHT LOUD PERSONAL PHONE CALL OF THE DAY. Seriously. Dude. Fuck off.

AND she had already left by the time I got back (two minutes early tyvm). This whole "phones always covered" thing isn't a bug in my ass, its a firm policy. They make these coverage groups for a reason. She and I had talked about my extending lunch a bit on my birthday (trading off a quarter h our here and there is pretty normal) but now I'm thinking I'd better not do it. A NOY ING.

Hivemind: what do you bring as a symbolic gift for a bachelorette party? I'm going to my first one this weekend, and I have no idea what to bring.

If you bring penis-shaped pasta maybe you can anwser the age-old question: Which is less horrifying, red sauce? or cream sauce? (Or pesto!)

One fitted sheet is not a present!

It is if the thread-count is high enough! That shit is redonkulous. And heavenly.

don't know if I could call him Sambo without stumbling over it.

Maybe but the emphasis on the second syllable? Pretend it's French... Sambeau.

I am truly awful at remembering to do thank you notes, so my mother has already bought the thank you notes as a gentle reminder that it is expected of me this time.

When we threw my Sister's shower I made her a set of thank you notes with addressed envelopes (heck, I already had all the addresses on labels). I gave them to her when I gave her the list we made of the opening. She luuuuved me for that.

But then I realize there are people who DIG the chance to see every. single. gift. the bride gets, whether to live vicariously or to judge how their gift measures up.

I just think its fun.

I was always bummed as a kid when someone didn't open the present. The whole idea was to make them happy, not to fill up their car for the drive home from the roller rink. And as a child thank you cards were no comparison to someone reacting to something I'd been really excited to get them. As an adult it bugs me less because the gifts are generally more practical, I like thank you notes, and I understand time constraints now... but it's still sort of disappointing.