Now we're saving a vampire from vampires. I got two words for that -- Nuh and uh.

Gunn ,'Underneath'


Atlantic Canadian Monday Madness  

[NAFDA] We used to get Buffy the day before everyone else, now we get Angel a week after everyone else. And Firefly every Monday!


Sue - Apr 23, 2003 6:06:32 am PDT #2038 of 6793
hip deep in pie

Wow, 'Ouise! Go you! I have job quitting fantasies. But they all involve lottery wins or the sudden deaths of heretofore unknown rich aunts for whom I was secretly the favourite.

I hope Helen is feeling better today.


Griffyn - Apr 23, 2003 10:54:37 am PDT #2039 of 6793
A person's concepts should exceed their vocabulary, or what's a metaphor?

Go Ouise! Better to be happy than rich.

Megen, you could do worse than beauty school. After all, that's where Chuck Berry got his diploma.


Ouise - Apr 23, 2003 11:14:01 am PDT #2040 of 6793
Socks are a running theme throughout the series. They are used as symbols of freedom, redemption and love.

Thanks! Making the decision was such a relief. I don't know what the schedule will be, especially since my boss is currently on vacation, so I can't talk to him about it. Still, I can start making plans. Yay!


Jon B. - Apr 23, 2003 11:38:06 am PDT #2041 of 6793
A turkey in every toilet -- only in America!

Did you really say "It's wrong to lie, except to the bourgeoisie" when you were two, Ouise?


Ouise - Apr 23, 2003 11:43:19 am PDT #2042 of 6793
Socks are a running theme throughout the series. They are used as symbols of freedom, redemption and love.

Yes, I did. To my grandmother! She took my over to my mother and said "Do you know what this baby just said?" My mother was less shocked, since she and my father were who I'd learned that stuff from. I had an interesting early childhood.


amych - Apr 23, 2003 11:50:17 am PDT #2043 of 6793
Now let us crush something soft and watch it fountain blood. That is a girlish thing to want to do, yes?

I'm impressed. I was nowhere near that much of a radical when I was two -- I spent that year in the kind of existential dread and ennui that pretty much precludes political action, and my great quote of the year was "I'm bored because I'm going to die."

Radical political awareness had to wait until I was three.


§ ita § - Apr 23, 2003 11:55:20 am PDT #2044 of 6793
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

At two I could pick Mao Tse Tung and Fidel Castro out of a lineup, but I wasn't sure why they both liked red so much.


Ouise - Apr 23, 2003 12:08:38 pm PDT #2045 of 6793
Socks are a running theme throughout the series. They are used as symbols of freedom, redemption and love.

Snerk, amych.

At two I could pick Mao Tse Tung and Fidel Castro out of a lineup
Me too! Well, Mao and Trudeau, actually. My parents would point at the picture of Mao and say "Who's that?" and I would respond "Chai'Mao". Then they would point at the picture of Trudeau and ask "Who's that?" and I'd say "Lackey Trudeau," which was, naturally, short for "Trudeau, lackey of US imperialism."


Griffyn - Apr 23, 2003 12:10:56 pm PDT #2046 of 6793
A person's concepts should exceed their vocabulary, or what's a metaphor?

I'm impressed as well. I was four before I could tell you which presidential candidates were crooked and which were womanizers.

Of course, at the time I thought 'zipper problem' meant their fly wouldn't stay up and wondered why they didn't use buttons instead.


§ ita § - Apr 23, 2003 12:12:48 pm PDT #2047 of 6793
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

I'm incredibly apolitical now, but I used to have pictures of Thatcher and Indira Gandhi (I know, I know) up on my wall when I was 8, and the J'can MP I crushed on hardest then is now our Prime Minister, and it still gives me a warm feeling inside.

But now I'm shallow and care not of those workings.