You'll fight, and you'll shag, and you'll hate each other till it makes you quiver, but you'll never be friends.

Spike ,'Sleeper'


Natter 67: Overriding Vetoes  

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


Amy - Feb 20, 2011 5:30:26 pm PST #24155 of 30001
Because books.

Samantha is the correct answer to that question, Owen! Unless it's Endora.

He might have seen it on TVLand lately.


WindSparrow - Feb 20, 2011 5:31:06 pm PST #24156 of 30001
Love is stronger than death and harder than sorrow. Those who practice it are fierce like the light of stars traveling eons to pierce the night.

You'd never seen the dead parrot sketch????!!!!!!?

I had never seen John Cleese and Michael Palin perform the Dead Parrot Sketch until I moved in with Daniel, and we got a bunch of MP videos from the library.

ETA: By which I mean I'd already heard it from friends. Also, I had the lyrics to the Lumberjack Song down pat long before seeing MP go at it themselves. There's also a "Redundancy Lessons" sketch in my memory banks, that I've never actually seen MP doing, and I sometimes wonder if it were an improvisation in the style of, rather than an actual MP sketch.


Cashmere - Feb 20, 2011 5:31:48 pm PST #24157 of 30001
Now tagless for your comfort.

I went with Samantha's nose twitch. Adorable.


Cashmere - Feb 20, 2011 5:34:58 pm PST #24158 of 30001
Now tagless for your comfort.

Cute story from the cub scout camp out:

The other moms and I we settling in our cabin--right next door to the youngest scouts (including Owen). I heard their den leader go over to quiet them down and then heard singing.

I found out the next morning that his son had asked for a lullaby and so he sang a song for them! So. Freakin'. Cute.


msbelle - Feb 20, 2011 5:42:55 pm PST #24159 of 30001
I remember the crazy days. 500 posts an hour. Nubmer! Natgbsb

A friend in NY recently got hit by train, he passed out on the platform and fell such that his leg got hit. Luckily the leg was able to be saved, but he has months of surgeries ahead.

Also never seen dead parrot, seen very little of MP actually.

Love Bewitched, LOVE Paul Lind.


§ ita § - Feb 20, 2011 5:43:03 pm PST #24160 of 30001
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Completely related to everything before it: a gay porn actor on gay-for-pay. I know it's not really sexy behind the scenes, but damn. I had thought the tops were some sort of machines, but no, not really. Let me not speak of the horrors of being a bottom.

Yes, that's where ita's been for the past fifteen minutes. No, it's not safe for work.

I didn't get into Monty Python until university--I left the room when it came on TV when I lived in England because I hated the credit animations so much.

Oops?


Connie Neil - Feb 20, 2011 5:45:38 pm PST #24161 of 30001
brillig

I have a Nook! I named it Moe. I came back from Wendover (the poor cousin of Vegas where all the sinnin' Utahns go) with enough money left over from black jack to pay for the black and white wireless version. I haven't bought any books because there are too many wonderful free ones around. How did I not know that Georgette Heyer was so wonderfully droll?

Of course, the Wendover trip was also fraught with drama, as the only road into town crosses a hundred miles of desert and salt flats, and it got closed because of a humongous windstorm that blew over semis etc. The same storm currently playing its Eastern tour. People on the Fun Bus have been stranded out there before, sometimes overnight. Adventures all over the place.


Kathy A - Feb 20, 2011 5:49:51 pm PST #24162 of 30001
We're very stretchy. - Connie Neil

The PBS station here in Chicago had a great thing going in the late '70s to mid-'80s, when they would show all Brit stuff on Sunday nights, starting with Monty Python at 10:00, alternative Brit comedies at 10:30 (usually Dave Allen at Large, but sometimes The Two Ronnies, The Goodies, or Fawlty Towers), and then Doctor Who at 11:00, which they showed in the story's entirety instead of the original Brit broadcast of half-hour episodes. Since DW usually didn't finish until 12:30 or so, Mom wasn't a big fan of us staying up to watch so late on a school night, but she said it was up to us after we got out of 8th grade, so we stayed up.


DavidS - Feb 20, 2011 5:51:06 pm PST #24163 of 30001
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

Samantha is the correct answer to that question, Owen! Unless it's Endora.

Serena!


Amy - Feb 20, 2011 6:07:54 pm PST #24164 of 30001
Because books.

The PBS station here in Chicago had a great thing going in the late '70s to mid-'80s, when they would show all Brit stuff on Sunday nights, starting with Monty Python at 10:00, alternative Brit comedies at 10:30 (usually Dave Allen at Large, but sometimes The Two Ronnies, The Goodies, or Fawlty Towers), and then Doctor Who at 11:00

I remember seeing bits and pieces of Python on late at night when I was a kid -- I know I saw the scene with the knight with no arms and legs, spouting blood, long before I ever saw the movie. I was sort of horrified, but also horrified because I found it so funny.