Jayne: That's a good idea. Good idea. Tell us where the stuff's at so I can shoot you. Mal: Point of interest? Offering to shoot us might not work so well as an incentive as you might imagine.

'Out Of Gas'


Natter 71: Someone is wrong on the Internet  

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.


Burrell - Mar 03, 2013 1:46:31 pm PST #13508 of 30001
Why did Darth Vader cross the road? To get to the Dark Side!

anyway, before the year is out, people will be treated with light and sound

Oh I wanted to remark on this. I am not denying your nurse's woo-woo, but there's a completely non-woo, in fact pretty cool, experimental cancer treatment that uses light to destroy the cancer cells. I keep reading about it.


erin_obscure - Mar 03, 2013 1:47:42 pm PST #13509 of 30001
Occasionally I’m callous and strange

And, dear me, i just set up a priority call on a 2nd hand report of a menage a trois by a freeway onramp. Good times. Poor ignorant caller tried to term it an "orgy". No way, lady, they'd need at least one more person. And dollars to donuts the situation ain't what she thinks.


Amy - Mar 03, 2013 1:51:32 pm PST #13510 of 30001
Because books.

I'm finally writing my own stuff again.

Yay!


Burrell - Mar 03, 2013 1:53:21 pm PST #13511 of 30001
Why did Darth Vader cross the road? To get to the Dark Side!

Thanks Amy. It's you and all the other buffista writers that help motivate me.


Calli - Mar 03, 2013 1:55:16 pm PST #13512 of 30001
I must obey the inscrutable exhortations of my soul—Calvin and Hobbs

Burrell, if that came through I would gladly eat my "woo" comment, sans ketchup.


§ ita § - Mar 03, 2013 1:56:32 pm PST #13513 of 30001
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

but there's a completely non-woo, in fact pretty cool, experimental cancer treatment that uses light to destroy the cancer cells. I keep reading about it

If you tell me this is because God created light first, and that we have to transition away from pharmacology because one person owns all of big pharma (seems the Rockefellers and the Clintons and the Bushes all report up to this person) and medicines will no longer work as of September or so (I'm assuming I can ask for a new nurse with zero repercussion or shame then) I'm afraid I do need to write you off too. If it's just that electromagnetic radiation is a form of treatment, then it's no biggie, that's been in use for a while and I'm sure there will continue to be developments on that front.


DavidS - Mar 03, 2013 1:59:30 pm PST #13514 of 30001
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

A lovely blog post about Sinbad and Me.

The second in the series, and surely a book that helped save my life and shape my future, is Platt’s masterpiece, Sinbad and Me. It’s the story of Steve’s twelfth summer when, having flunked math and facing summer school, persuades his folks to let him stay on in the house on the outer shore of Long Island, in company with his English bulldog Sinbad (easily in the running for the greatest name dog name ever). Left to their own devices, Sinbad and Steve find themselves in all kind of hot water: nearly drowning in an undertow trying to get into a locked summer home; investigated by both the FBI, the Mob, and Steve’s summer science teacher; and yet Platt still finds time for fascinating (to a young teen) plot eddies into numismatism, pirates, immigration history, the background and personality of bulldogs, and the architecture of Long Island (Steve is an architecture buff and first bonds with his science teacher because of Steve’s wonderfully engaging conversation about the eras of American architecture).

Sinbad was an important book for me, at the time I encountered it, for all kinds of reasons: it was about a kid my age who wasn’t sure what he was going to do with his life but had been left alone for a summer to figure it out, who knew he was attracted to smart funny girls but had no idea what to do about it, whose best friend was a nerd but who Steve freely acknowledged was three times smarter than himself, who would look out for the old immigrant lady who years before had saved Sinbad from poisoning, who knew he was smart himself and knew that some adults (and some of his contemporaries) were idiots—and sometimes got into trouble for acknowledging that he knew it, and who, when the chips were down, was going to stand up for himself, his friends, and his own growing sense of himself. It’s a wonderful, wonderful book, and was immensely important for me (and, I’d guess, several generations of boys-turning-into-men). It gave me the ability to articulate the kind of person I wanted to be, and it provided a template I could try to live up to.


Amy - Mar 03, 2013 2:01:12 pm PST #13515 of 30001
Because books.

If you tell me this is because God created light first, and that we have to transition away from pharmacology because one person owns all of big pharma (seems the Rockefellers and the Clintons and the Bushes all report up to this person) and medicines will no longer work as of September or so

Again I say, WOW.


Burrell - Mar 03, 2013 2:01:26 pm PST #13516 of 30001
Why did Darth Vader cross the road? To get to the Dark Side!

Ha ita, definitely not a woo-woo thing. Not sure how it works, but undoubtedly closer to EMR than God's creation.


Burrell - Mar 03, 2013 2:02:59 pm PST #13517 of 30001
Why did Darth Vader cross the road? To get to the Dark Side!

Also is it just me, or does ita's nurse sound like that website Consuela found that randomly generates conspiracy theories?