Really? Ha!
Natter 63: Life after PuppyCam
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.
Dana - I know right. I've been a big fan of hers since Sideshow and was kinda freaked out by her screaming last night.
I'm still a little put off about the musical itself. Her speech didn't help. But I'm also a little curious.
work.
do not want.
In Britain, this cold fact led to the rise of series such as Goodness Gracious Me
P-C, I don't think he did that show, but he's saying how the influence of Indians/South Asians in the British culture has been around for much longer than it has in the US, leading to shows such as GGM.
I love that he referenced Dave Allen--I grew up watching him on the local PBS station, and loved his show.
ETA: I lied. I reread the article, and it looks like they're comparing GGM to his standup act as both being original material written by Indian performers.
ETA2: Oooh, he was Ali Hakam in Trevor Nunn's Oklahoma! I'll have to pull out my tape of that show and watch him (I only recorded it for the Hugh Jackman factor).
Oh, lord, I could lose hours in erinaceous's new project. The first word I checked was quincunx. What was your first word?
Me too! I first looked up 'ecumenical'. I have absolutely no idea why it came to mind, but the results were cool.
Whoa, I did splendiferous and it picked up two Tweets using the word in the past hour! Huh.
I did recession for the statistics. There's a bubble in the late 1940s and a giant A-bomb right now.
I plugged in slumgullion, that bane of my childhood, the "dish" that my mother made with ground beef, stewed tomatoes, and macaroni (I shudder just typing it), and discovered that it dates back by name to the Civil War. A) I'm impressed that it's there and the information, but B) I'm more highly impressed that 4 other people have looked that word up. I wonder how many of them were forced to eat that stuff as kids.
(I shouldn't bitch, it's what you eat when there's not much in the cabinet, and Mother grew up poor and she probably learned it from her mother, but still. I'm sorry, Mother, but your cooking was not the stuff dreams of home cooking are made of. At least not to this veggie-hating, picky, supertaster kid.)
I had my wisdom teeth out and now Bob is making me soup from scratch. It is cute.
Dr Who fan has flashing blue light on Tardis coffin at his funeral
Friends of Doctor Who fanatic Seb Neale gave him a fitting send-off at his funeral yesterday – in a Tardis coffin complete with flashing blue light.
Seb, 26, who bore an amazing resemblance to Dr Who actor David Tennant, died from head injuries after a fall at a friend’s barbecue.
His parents knew he would not want sombre music or a religious ceremony, so they arranged a funeral that celebrated his love of the show.
So the 200 mourners who arrived at the crematorium yesterday were handed a service card with a picture of Seb dressed as Tennant and holding the Doctor’s sonic screwdriver
Emblazoned across the glossy card were the words: “I’m a Time Lord – I’m not a human being. I walk in eternity.”
And instead of readings from the scriptures, the service used excerpts from Dr Who scripts.
One read: “One day I shall come back. Yes, I shall come back. Until then, there must be no regrets, no tears, no anxieties.
“Just go forward in all your beliefs and prove to me that I am not mistaken in mine. Goodbye.” As Seb’s Tardis coffin made its exit, the blue light on top started flashing and the famous electronic theme music from the TV series blared out.