I thought Gud was spending an awful lot of time in the garage recently...
Natter 48 Contiguous States of Denial
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.
She took a baby from a potential mom and dad. bottomline
And stuck it in her own womb!
Sheesh.
Go to your womb!
The 50 Greatest TV Commercials of the 80s.
Slowly but surely making my way through these. This commentary cracked me up:
12. Teddy Ruxpin’s Friend Grubby
Yup, animatronic animal toys were all the rage in the ’80s, creating an entire generation of kids with unbelievably fucked-up nightmares.
13. Snuggle fabric softener
What does it say about us as a society that we’re obviously completely obsessed with talking, evil-looking stuffed animals? This one should have found its way into a horror movie.
What does it say about us as a society that we’re obviously completely obsessed with talking, evil-looking stuffed animals?
The 80's was also the decade of the whole Ewok fiasco.
sheeple
I love this word. It is so full of righteous hatred and rejection. Also, I first encountered it among crack-addled weirdoes in fandom, so seeing it on the fingertips of political ranters just makes me smile.
It makes you wonder, doesn't it, what Vietnam would have been like if the US hadn't intervened at all. Throw out the French after DPB, and then...? So Southeast Asia goes commie. Really, in the grand scheme -- turned out not to be that big a deal.
I think Iraq, as a symbol for a problematic region, was more of a Big Simmering Issue, but, there are ways to handle a large hot kettle that do not involve scalding people to death with bean soup. Okay, that metaphor got away from me.
From the spam article:
But don’t spammers still have to link to the incriminating Web sites where they sell their disreputable wares? Well, not anymore. Many of the messages in the latest spam wave promote penny stocks — part of a scheme that antispam researchers call the “pump and dump.” Spammers buy the inexpensive stock of an obscure company and send out messages hyping it. They sell their shares when the gullible masses respond and snap up the stock. No links to Web sites are needed in the messages.
Though the scam sounds obvious, a joint study by researchers at Purdue University and Oxford University this summer found that spam stock cons work. Enough recipients buy the stock that spammers can make a 5 percent to 6 percent return in two days, the study concluded.
So in order to make spam go away, we have to kill everyone who buys stuff advertised in spam.
Shouldn't be a problem. We just send out a spam that we're giving away free cars, and when they all show up at the warehouse, we lock the doors and weld them shut. And they'll have nothing to eat but Spam for as long as they survive.
Ewwwwwwwwww, freepers!
I know. Do you know how long it takes to fumigate the board when someone quotes them here? Days. It takes days.
13. Snuggle fabric softener
What does it say about us as a society that we’re obviously completely obsessed with talking, evil-looking stuffed animals? This one should have found its way into a horror movie.
When I was a kid, I used to fantasize about blowing away the Snuggle bear with a shotgun. That proves your point. I think.
ION for DIYers, How to Pan Roast Coffee
Many of the messages in the latest spam wave promote penny stocks
Really, people who buy into schemes like this deserve to lose their money. But it would be more efficient if they would just hand over big wads of cash to me.
Someone from Current called to interview me about fandom. He was asking me what are some of the biggest fandoms.
I grinned and said, "I'd start with Daily Kos."
Seriously. Freepers, Kos, AmericaBlog, they should all have special places at fandom_wank. They make scifi fans look completely sane.