The OC was 10 years ago. Everyone get your cane to shake at those damn kids.
My dash yesterday was full of "OMG, Seth Cohen
is
Stiles Stillinski!" and I was sad because a) I hadn't noticed and b) they're watching The OC for the first time now.
::stares wistfully at the S1 boxset on her shelf::
My boss called me to tell me to do Y, maybe, when I do X. I'm all "X is done, though. Check your email." Oh, oops?
Strix, JZ, Aims, I'll join you on that bench. It's exhausting to be constantly worried, and even more exhausting when you never know if you're going to have a job come the following day. The months when everything hits the fan unexpectedly -- like ... bed bugs! and expensive prescriptions! -- are terrifying.
The OC was so weird, because it was SO GOOD the first season (which is not that unusual) and then got steadily worse, but then somehow became a completely different show which I loved the 4th Season. I think I loved Ryan being funny. And New Caitlin. And no Marissa. And Taylor. And Summer rescuing bunnies!
I agree with you, Sophia. I think after the 2nd season I was OUT.
The final season was great too, though. I really enjoyed it. But, dear god, I'm trying to recall other shows that tanked so bad second year--Heroes? Eureka didn't stink until year 3, and it recovered too. Not Heroes, sadly. We'll just deem those seasons the TV versions of (Highlander 2) (you have to whisper it, or you'll catch it on TV and be forced to watch...).
Zulilly has Adirondack chairs! I can't believe I'm waffling on whether or not I want to wait their forever shipping times. Because, you know, summer will be over in 16 days. But for $90--sheeit, the original cost at Cost Market was $80. And it's got a nice natural finish: [link] Yeah, I'ma do it.
Getting that URL just reminded me. We have a web team that's not in IT, they're marketing. They focus on client side technology, although they do have some back end knowledge. Their tools are HTML, CSS, and Javascript. In IT, we have programmers whose
output
is HTML, but that doesn't mean they know (or care about) it.
The web team designed an error page that IT was to implement. It said "Our apologies..." But the O was actually the lens of a magnifying glass. I give the developer the HTML and image, and he comes back with a page that says "ur apologies" and asks me if it's right.
I'm sorry, what? How is this a question? Do you not even look at the screen?
I asked him where the image was, and he said there was no image. I start opening the HTML, and he says "No! There was no image tag!" He's right--the image was a table background. But it was *there* in the HTML I gave him, and not there in what he gave me back. So he took it out. On purpose. It was a thing that he did.
HOW DO YOU DO THAT??? How do you think those results are good enough to show anyone? Do you not wonder why I sent you an image with a filename that matches some weird parameter in the HTML? I mean, assuming you don't know HTML well enough to know that tables can have image backgrounds, which is...that's not excusable, IMO.
This is his
job.
He's a .NET developer, and his output *is* HTML. He's writing a web application! Front and back and middle end! But he thinks "ur apologies" is good enough.
That's what I worry about with some of the copy that gets to me. That someone thought "enh--good enough."
No! We're supposed to be better than good! Let's aim for excellent!
If I told that to his manager, she'd hold it against me for bringing it up. "What am I supposed to do with that information?"
Oh, and this was not the incompetent developer. This was the most senior developer working on this product that's most used by thousands of our users.
Okay, that was clearly festering. Back to slide deck.
Flea, I'd say talk all you want about the dad drama (which...good lord) just not in front of her?
The wedding I was at this weekend nearly was a pantsless wedding apparently, but no I e could bring themselves to tell the bride. My uncle's pants split while he was driving over and my cousin (his son the groom) got his tux missing the pants! Luckily someone was able to run over to the place and get new pairs, but not until a couple minutes before.
The Man of Honor (bride's brother) at the last wedding I was at went down the aisle holding the seam along his outer thigh together. And the ceremony was already delayed a bit while the entire male component of the wedding party from groom on down watched Youtube videos on how to tie a bow tie.
the entire male component of the wedding party from groom on down watched Youtube videos on how to tie a bow tie.
This is hilarious. Just absolutely hilarious.
Oh no-- not pants splitting! The last wedding I was at (my BFF's brother) I was put to work sewing a bridesmaid into her dress. The zipper broke, and it was the fastest way to get her into it. Also, the priest was not understanding if us being late- he said he was going to start without us!
Re: the OC-- I think I said I LOVED season 4....
No! We're supposed to be better than good! Let's aim for excellent!
Just aim for finishing all of the words and they'd be doing well.