What's My Line is kind of underrated and awesome.
Spike ,'Sleeper'
Spike's Bitches 44: It's about the rules having changed.
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risqué (and frisqué), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
And, of course, The Wish and Doppelgangland back to back.
Also, Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered & the Zeppo as a double feature.
Better an earhook than an asshook, though, dontcha think?
Just don't get them mixed up.
What's My Line is kind of underrated and awesome.
Because of the monkey pants, right? I was thinking of watching those 2!
Also the Zeppo.
Because of the monkey pants, right? I was thinking of watching those 2!
Yuh huh!
Better an earhook than an asshook, though, dontcha think?
Just don't get them mixed up.
Heh, my smartass reply was "Speak for yourself, vanilla bean!" but then I would've had to include a "just kidding" disclaimer which seemed wussy.
Zenkitty, however, can speak on this subject with authority.
::fears, respects and admires Zen for this::
I would've had to include a "just kidding" disclaimer which seemed wussy.
Just say "Snooch".
Okay -- What's My Line 1 & 2, it is! Uh...are!
I say you have to throw in Passion, and Becoming Pts 1 & 2.
Zenkitty, however, can speak on this subject with authority.
tries to look innocent
fails utterly
Yeah, I get confused by the "girlfriend" thing too.
I tend to giggle like a 12 year old.
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Not quite -- in the US version of the thing, there are a few states that allow marriage by declaring yourselves to be married (as opposed to getting a license from the gummint); this can include either doing a thing in front of witnesses or living/presenting yourselves as if married. This all goes back to English law before the marriage law reforms of the 1750s*, and so only exists in states that adopted their local laws way back then: definitely Pennsylvania, maybe New Hampshire and a few other legal oddballs? In none of those places is there an automatic "you're hitched if you live together for xxyy years"** without intention to marry, and in the places where it does exist, the rules vary widely.
As I understand it, in Pennsylvania the Quaker founders had something to do with the fact that you can just declare yourselves married and don't need an officiant. I could be totally wrong of course.
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When Lewis and I lived together, before we were married, his mother used to refer to me as his "special friend."
Which caused us no end of amusement.
You were his period?
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