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Ad_absurdum_per_aspera
adabsurdumperaspera--disqus

"Badly wounded and pursued by Allied forces, her crew scuttled the battleship, which sank with heavy casualties. Given her brief career and inglorious demise…"

I must confess to having a strange thought during the look-forward denouement last night: all their lives were full of dead ends and false starts and problems and chaos while Zeek was alive, but without him everything seems to be coming up roses for the whole family…

"There’s still one episode left to see where both [Adam and Crosby] end up in their careers, and at this point that could be pretty much anywhere."

Then again, Sky*Maul* was comic genius (and they've come out with a second edition — I've got to order that and see if they can top the Sky Monkeys, Da Vinci Code Secret
Decoder Ring, and other coffee-snorters of the first one).
http://www.skymaul.com/

Just out of curiosity, are you still receiving patches? (Forbidden to use XP at work for fear that any newfound security vulnerabilities would go unpatched, I've also gradually replaced it with Windows 7 in that part of the extended family for which I do tech support.)

Since I saw the headline, Emmylou Harris's reading of "Jerusalem Tomorrow" has been stuck in my head, not that that's a bad thing. (Her cover of "All That You Have Is Your Soul" isn't that far from spoken-word either.)

The nostalgia channels that have proliferated on digital-broadcast TV sometimes resurrect "Burke's Law" in the wee smalls, which probably means it's available on DVD (those two things of course often happen together). I think "Honey West" often comes along for the ride.

One of my professors, who had a fine ability to isolate themes and place them amid a wider context literary
and historical setting, liked to talk about Star Trek in the context
of the Transcendentalists and their various allies and opponents. He
thought Spock and McCoy to be fine examples of the tragedy of the
half

Nor had I, but it works for me… and makes me wonder if in some parallel universe, Russell Crowe took over the role of Kirk at some point and was pretty good at it.

I don't know if getting the police involved is quite indicated (without other signs) but it definitely clears the bar for seeming kinda creepy and making friends worry. Being over-controlling of another person's life and belittling his or her tastes would often be considered among the warning signs of an emotionally

> bad comedy trailers.

> "A never-ending playlist that only plays the first 10 or 15 seconds of any song before skipping to the next one. " <

As long as we're diverging from the titular subject of sitcoms: In 1999, when Benjamin Bratt was on Law and Order, they got his then-girlfriend Julia Roberts, who turned in a memorable performance as a more than worthy adversary for our normally all-conquering heroes…

There are also answer songs by another artist — some intertwined with sequel songs.

Yeah, "El Paso City" — that was hair-standing-on-end weird, with the intimations of reincarnation and the premonition of the singer's own possible demise. Those were three very musically different songs, too, all good, though the sheer length of "Feleena" explains why I only heard it on the radio once.

Or the one he and Niles bought and tried to turn around — it isn't clear that the patrons got their dinner, but talk about a free show…

Hmm… I thought they shot those scenes at one particular Twisters, which is a regional chain. (I'll further speculate that several Twisters locations are in buildings that were made available by the financial troubles of Burger King several years ago. Or is it Weck's that I'm thinking of?)

I missed that particular wrinkle, but as others have noted, this year brought plenty. Maybe there's going to be a crossover episode with an X-Files sequel in which we find out something really unexpected about the Braverman clan and their relationship with space-time.

I thought the Whiz Kid tests from the drug store weren't even useful for a couple of weeks after conception.

Great minds think alike.