I got stabbed, you know, right here.

Mal ,'Shindig'


Natter 66: Get Your Kicks.  

Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, pandas, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.


Maria - May 28, 2010 6:52:45 pm PDT #2406 of 30001
Not so nice is that I'm about to ruin a Friday morning for a bunch of people because of a series of unfortunate events and an upset foreign government. - shrift

How's MK, sara?

And you are totally right about MD, except for the lower portion of Montgomery County. They've got a superiority complex.

Feeling like you're integrating? Darlin', if you ain't integrated, then I don't know who is. It's your place, and your people.


sarameg - May 28, 2010 7:11:55 pm PDT #2407 of 30001

He's holding. In a week more we'll see.

I've always felt like an outsider/poseur, even in my hometown, when compared to the in-ness of my parents' communities (which, really, was a function of time and place.) But even after carving my spot out in my old place, I didn't quite fit, possibly because of the transatory nature of apt living. I loved Baltimore since I moved here, in all it's contradictions, but I never referred to it as my hometown or where I was from. I fit here so well, I'm not sure what to call my hometown anymore. Cruces raised me. NM is always a part of me. Endor Gardens in Baltimore is Home.


Maria - May 28, 2010 7:18:27 pm PDT #2408 of 30001
Not so nice is that I'm about to ruin a Friday morning for a bunch of people because of a series of unfortunate events and an upset foreign government. - shrift

Cruces is where you were born and raised. There's no need to call it your hometown if you don't want to. Most people wouldn't be able to the tell the difference, but you'll know and that's what's important.

Endor Gardens in Baltimore is Home.

How much do I love this typo? I'm upset you didn't introduce me to the ewoks, though....


sarameg - May 28, 2010 7:29:36 pm PDT #2409 of 30001

Swear to god. Always make that mistake.

Oh, and Sarah has our original sink, which she got when our neighbor renovated her bathroom. I covet it. It's lavender. An awesome pedestal. Want.


P.M. Marc - May 28, 2010 7:32:01 pm PDT #2410 of 30001
So come, my friends, be not afraid/We are so lightly here/It is in love that we are made; In love we disappear

Oh, and Sarah has our original sink, which she got when our neighbor renovated her bathroom. I covet it. It's lavender. An awesome pedestal. Want.

You should keep an eye on craigslist, and see if there are local architectural salvage joints.


Maria - May 28, 2010 7:34:42 pm PDT #2411 of 30001
Not so nice is that I'm about to ruin a Friday morning for a bunch of people because of a series of unfortunate events and an upset foreign government. - shrift

What Plei said. Though the peach one has a nice kitschy feel to it.

Also keep an eye out for anyone in the neighborhood remodeling their bathroom. Lightning can definitely strike twice.


Ginger - May 28, 2010 7:34:49 pm PDT #2412 of 30001
"It didn't taste good. It tasted soooo horrible. It tasted like....a vodka martini." - Matilda

Also the supply flights over The Hump in China.

I knew Moose Moss of the Flying Tigers. His daughter and I were in high school together.

My geekiness is scattershot. I chaired a major sf convention, but I have strenuously avoided costumes. I am obsessive about 19th century American literature, some eras of illustration, electricity, a fair amount of genre television, post-apocalyptic fiction and epidemics. I know that Captain America was never in the JLA because, hello, not a DC character.


sarameg - May 28, 2010 7:39:14 pm PDT #2413 of 30001

Oh, I am keeping my eye out. Someone in some other house would LOVE the peach sink. It's classic 50s. Just does not go with my bath [link] . When I replace it, I'll probably sell it to the local old stuff place [link]


Kathy A - May 28, 2010 10:04:59 pm PDT #2414 of 30001
We're very stretchy. - Connie Neil

My geekiness is also rather wide-ranging but not as specific as Hec's and tommyrot's.

Although I am watching the Pete Seeger PBS show right now, and realize I know waaay too many folk songs for someone my age. My dad liked folk, but only certain groups. I actually reintroduced the Weavers to him; he'd forgetten about them since his middle-school years, but I've loved them since I first heard about them in college (FBI history class--we read an article about their blacklisting).

My non-fannish, non tv-watching uncle stopped while flipping channels to watch The Body because he was so mesmerised by how well it portrayed the feeling when a parent died.

That's an episode I can never have my mom watch--she came home one afternoon to find her husband dead on the couch from a heart attack, and it's too damn close to what she went through.


Kathy A - May 28, 2010 10:12:29 pm PDT #2415 of 30001
We're very stretchy. - Connie Neil

OK, this might be a bit geeky. I just learned about Baba Brinkman and his rapping Chaucer (thank you, Rachel Maddow!), and in trying to find him on Youtube, I stumbled across a rap of the opening of the Prologue of Canterbury Tales in Middle English. It really works, too!