Shh! I kinda wanna hear me talking right now!

Glory ,'The Killer In Me'


Natter 68: Bork Bork Bork  

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.


Kathy A - Apr 25, 2011 9:24:44 am PDT #5135 of 30001
We're very stretchy. - Connie Neil

WTF, Suela? That's just ridiculous. I can't believe they've been sitting on that project for 18 years!

Thanks for all the support, everyone! I knew I could count on some kind words here, because I didn't get them at my dad's yesterday. (I didn't expect much there, but I would have liked to have heard a "OMG, you look fantastic!" But, nada. Maybe they were afraid I'd be sensitive about it, I don't know, but I would have liked something.) When I looked at those pictures in the back of the camera, I really didn't see much of a difference from February's set. But, after I downloaded them and saw them on my computer monitor, I felt much better about them.

Speaking of food and lunches, the Chicago Tribune's food critic has a huge rave for Grant Achatz's (he of Alinea) new restaurant, Next. Sounds delicious, and impossible to get tickets (yes, tickets, not reservations).


erikaj - Apr 25, 2011 9:26:33 am PDT #5136 of 30001
"already on the kiss-cam with Karl Marx"-

I can't imagine doing that. Maybe I'm not sufficiently discriminating.


Jessica - Apr 25, 2011 9:28:59 am PDT #5137 of 30001
And then Ortus came and said "It's Ortin' time" and they all Orted off into the sunset

I wish I could afford to take full advantage of this restaurant trend. (I do plan to get to What Happens When at least once before it closes, but I would have loved to have tried all the menus!)


Consuela - Apr 25, 2011 9:33:50 am PDT #5138 of 30001
We are Buffistas. This isn't our first apocalypse. -- Pix

I can't believe they've been sitting on that project for 18 years!

Well, there were several attempts to get it done. But the great burden of my program is that while what I do is considered valuable, it has very little immediate return, so projects supporting it tend to get ranked low when it comes time to allocating funding. Other stuff is more urgent. But, yeah, 18 years. Kind of like to get it done.

And Kathy, I saw your pictures yesterday: congratulations on all the hard work! Brava!


Kathy A - Apr 25, 2011 9:40:49 am PDT #5139 of 30001
We're very stretchy. - Connie Neil

Thanks!

And, a fun article on the true origins of the play Grease.


tommyrot - Apr 25, 2011 10:00:03 am PDT #5140 of 30001
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, a few weeks ago I bought a new digital watch. I tried to figure out how to set it without reading the manual, but failed. Then I read the manual and I still don't know how to set it. I think they included the wrong manual, as they show a watch like mine that has four buttons, but my watch has no buttons.

This is the watch: Starck ph-1110

So far my google-fu has failed. Might have to call Fossil and/or the store I bought the watch from....


tommyrot - Apr 25, 2011 10:22:49 am PDT #5141 of 30001
Sir, it's not an offence to let your cat eat your bacon. Okay? And we don't arrest cats, I'm very sorry.

A contest for bad analogies: [link]

The first five winners, printed below, pocket £18 each; the rest get £10.

The state of the bathroom could only bring to mind the surface of a remote planet in which dungheaps and memphitic swamps co-existed with the entire toiletries and fragrances range of Galeries Lafayette.

The accountant had the world-weary air of a ferret that had been up so many trouser legs that life held no more surprises.

How to describe this novel? Picture it as The Aeniad meets Othello meets Moby Dick meets Peter Rabbit meets Mein Kampf meets the Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus meets The Highway Code. In that ballpark, anyway.

His morals were as twisted as an expensive Sicilian corkscrew that had been used as a way of extracting the pith from a bad apple before being driven over by an Eddie Stobart truck.

She gazed at him as lovingly as if he were her ear-lobe, replete with a diamond-encrusted earring, as reflected in a Parisian mirror.

She spoke as throatily as if a frog and its family had got into her throat and smoked a few packets of Peter Stuyvesant before growing claws and scratching at the inside of her thorax.


le nubian - Apr 25, 2011 10:32:15 am PDT #5142 of 30001
"And to be clear, I am the hell. And the high water."

so if a passport is getting back into a country, why did I need to show one when I was trying to enter Canada? Rather, a passport is for trying to enter a country (any country) but not when I leave? It's kind of the same action when I get on a plane though.

Anyway, I hope it is for people who don't have other proof of citizenship, although it still sounds onerous for a travel document. It isn't like a financial commitment is behind the passport.


le nubian - Apr 25, 2011 10:32:40 am PDT #5143 of 30001
"And to be clear, I am the hell. And the high water."

baby polar bear cubs:

[link]


DavidS - Apr 25, 2011 10:34:37 am PDT #5144 of 30001
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

The accountant had the world-weary air of a ferret that had been up so many trouser legs that life held no more surprises.

Oh, I like that one. I mean, you'd need it in a Douglas Adams context but it could work.