Never send a minion to do a god's work.

Glory ,'The Killer In Me'


Natter 62: The 62nd Natter  

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.


juliana - Nov 20, 2008 11:10:26 am PST #2558 of 10002
I’d be lying if I didn’t say that I miss them all tonight…

Oh - who asked which dog walks across the backs of its herdees? It's an Australian Kelpie. I would also like to share this pic of an American Akita.


tommyrot - Nov 20, 2008 11:13:05 am PST #2559 of 10002
Sir, it's not an offence to let your cat eat your bacon. Okay? And we don't arrest cats, I'm very sorry.

Oh - who asked which dog walks across the backs of its herdees?

Me!

It's an Australian Kelpie.

Cool.

Do they like to walk on top of people if no cattle are nearby? Perhaps owners should get a herd of giant Roombas?


tommyrot - Nov 20, 2008 11:15:26 am PST #2560 of 10002
Sir, it's not an offence to let your cat eat your bacon. Okay? And we don't arrest cats, I'm very sorry.

It appears to be World Philosophy Day.

eta: Four philosophical questions to make your brain hurt


Emily - Nov 20, 2008 11:20:20 am PST #2561 of 10002
"In the equation E = mc⬧, c⬧ is a pretty big honking number." - Scola

But I kinda did it because I'm curious.

Eh, if it shows up in town I might see it. The girl in the previews kind of intrigues me -- has she been in anything else? -- and of course Cedric...


lisah - Nov 20, 2008 11:26:50 am PST #2562 of 10002
Punishingly Intricate

So I guess I should be a bit embarrassed that I agreed to go see Twilight this weekend with a friend of mine.

pfft! I'm going with a big group of ladies tomorrow night. I'm hoping it's hilariously bad and that the place is packed with screaming fangirls! Later (possibly during) there will be drinking. Should be a hoot!


tommyrot - Nov 20, 2008 11:34:58 am PST #2563 of 10002
Sir, it's not an offence to let your cat eat your bacon. Okay? And we don't arrest cats, I'm very sorry.

Is the American Shopping Mall Dead?

There's something growing in the New Jersey Meadowlands, the marsh just nine miles west of Manhattan--and it isn't the gentle ferns that the bucolic name suggests. Instead, what's emerging is a man-made behemoth, the largest and most expensive mall ever built in the United States. Originally slated to open this month, Xanadu is now scheduled for completion next summer. Lawsuits, political grandstanding and construction delays have nearly doubled the mall's cost to $2.3 billion. When it's finished, the half-mile "retailtainment" center will be a Vegas-meets-Disneyland pleasure dome with the country's tallest Ferris wheel and first indoor artificial ski slope. There will also be a two free-fall skydiving jumps, indoor surfing, a mini-city for kids, a digital media river on the ceiling--and, oh, some 200 shops.

The scale and scope of the project would be breathtaking in its own right. But what makes Xanadu extraordinary is the fact that it is emerging just as the American mall--that most quintessential of American institutions--is in its dying throes, if not already dead. Moribund malls have not gone unnoticed amongst industry analysts and Web sites like Deadmalls.com that feature photos of hundreds of now-abandoned sites. But what were once just worrying signs appear to have finally flat-lined. Last year was the first in half a century that a new indoor mall didn't open somewhere in the country--a precipitous decline since the mid-1990s when they rose at a rate of 140 a year, according to Georgia Tech professor Ellen Dunham-Jones, coauthor of the forthcoming book "Retrofitting Suburbia," which focuses on the decline of malls and other commercial strips. Today, nearly a fifth of the country's largest 2,000 regional malls are failing, she says, and according to the International Council of Shopping Centers, and a record 150,000 retail outlets, including such mall mainstays as the Gap and Foot Locker, will close this year. Xanadu, whose officials declined NEWSWEEK's requests for comment, has named just nine tenants for its 200 spaces.


Jesse - Nov 20, 2008 11:48:06 am PST #2564 of 10002
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

Uh-oh: Happy people watch less TV


Gudanov - Nov 20, 2008 11:49:01 am PST #2565 of 10002
Coding and Sleeping

There was a big mall near where I live that died pretty quickly. Mostly from crime I think, people stopped thinking it was safe to go there and it died very quickly. There was a rather large strip mall and big box stores around it and they all died off a few years latter as well. Not much there now.


tommyrot - Nov 20, 2008 11:51:45 am PST #2566 of 10002
Sir, it's not an offence to let your cat eat your bacon. Okay? And we don't arrest cats, I'm very sorry.

So the Dow lost 5.56% today, following similar losses yesterday. So, has it lost almost half its value from the high in a year or year and a half ago?


Gudanov - Nov 20, 2008 11:54:15 am PST #2567 of 10002
Coding and Sleeping

So the Dow lost 5.56% today, following similar losses yesterday. So, has it lost almost half its value from the high in a year or year and a half ago?

That's depressing, makes me want to watch some TV.