It's so cool when it turns out a cliche is real.
'Objects In Space'
Natter 73: Chuck Norris only wishes he could Natter
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, butt kicking, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Canadians pretty much say everything people think they do. Ask one to say "The moose is loose about the house" sometime.
Oh, the denial! I think I laughed for six years.
Then again, I say "no problem" an awful lot.
she didn't know the song or that Rickrolling was a thing
I thought Rickrolling resurrected the song for a new generation and further.
Of course, the entire Canadian nation may be playing a practical joke on us. A more civilized response to the South Park movie.
I thought Rickrolling resurrected the song for a new generation and further.
So did I! Maybe not further enough.
Have "wrapped" my secret Santa gift in a plain brown paper bag. Fuck it, I don't care. I said I didn't want to do a gift exchange. Still need to make my dish for the potluck. Don't wanna.
A more civilized response to the South Park movie.
Well, my knowledge started from 1987 (I won't count the 1970-1973 Ontario period).
Is Kat here, or anyone who can answer Hawaii questions? I am reading a fic with a lot of white people talking like native Hawaiians, and calling mainlanders haole. I thought all white people in Hawaii were haole, though. Is this a "brother from another mother" situation?
Someone on IO9 asked people to talk about their furthest move. Mine's 4k+ miles, from Jamaica to London, which is easily beaten by just about anyone that moved to the East, but my father moving from Jamaica to Russia is pretty impressive. And my total mileage is relatively high. One of the posters, in her late 20s, has never moved, even house, and is quite boggled by us all. She's Romanian.
My longest move is 16,552 km, which is apparently about 40% of the earth's circumference. So that's nice.
Hubby lived on the North Shore for several years in the 70s, and I think he said haole was used for tourists or new people.
Plus, it's yet another thing of making Chanukah just like Christmas, rather than just letting it be its own thing.
I just did a short article for Hanukkah for the local paper. A friend of mine is a Jewish Religious Studies professor at the local uni and he is so much fun to talk to.
Hil, we have an AWESOME book that a resident wrote a couple of years ago on the Jewish community here. The old synagogue is now the county historical society. [link]
ita, bulging disc pain is so awful. I count myself lucky to have been a minor case. The three shots of cortisone in my spine at least allowed me to work up to exercising. I started with swimming and then yoga helped. Man, yoga helped. And believe it or not, roller derby has helped. My core has never been stronger.
I think he said haole was used for tourists or new people
Ah, okay. Although we have many blond Jamaicans who talk way more Patois than I do, it feels awkward to have all these uberwhite characters from the show talking that way. And she never grounded them in the island--I think they moved there too.
But! Not my place to complain, since I know jackshit. So, curious.
And believe it or not, roller derby has helped. My core has never been stronger.
Yeah, my problem with exercise is the head, so they exacerbate each other. I'm frankly scared to try unsupervised, but most of my "recent" PT made the pain intolerable.
Hil, we have an AWESOME book that a resident wrote a couple of years ago on the Jewish community here. The old synagogue is now the county historical society.
Cool. That's a bit of history that a lot of people tend to forget -- that throughout the 1800s, there were a whole lot of German Jews in small-ish towns all over the midwest and south. Mostly they owned small stores, or sometimes were doctors or lawyers or stuff like that -- basically, the non-farmer stuff that towns surrounded by farmland needed. Lasted several generations, but a lot of them moved to bigger cities when the local economies were collapsing during the Depression, and then, of the families that stayed, most of the baby boomer era kids went to college and then never moved back home -- also generally went to the bigger cities. I've seen a lot of articles lately about towns trying to figure out what to do with the old synagogue buildings.