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Dogstyle Afternoon
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I remember doing them between 1977 and 1980 when I was in Elementary School. We'd have to climb under our desks and cover our heads with our hands. This differed from our "Tornado Drills," where we'd have to walk single-file to the nearest bathroom, sit against a brick wall, and cover our heads with our hands. I

I think you're on to something with your observation that Sheldon has a need for companionship/someone to take care of him (or potentially worship) him. Also: maybe he could always afford the apartment fine on his own, except for the fact that he has to shell out an additional $300 a month on the storage unit?

Although your "museum" idea is also a good one, I don't have a huge problem with this. Sheldon can't dispose of completely unnecessary items, like every toothbrush he's ever had. A true scientist wouldn't be burdened by such trivialities. He can't get rid of them even though he wants to, which makes him feel shame

I have to admit, "Sole-derr" makes a heck of a lot more sense than "Sod-derr."

I guess the experience was different for different people, but I definitely was still terrified that the bombs were going to drop in the early 80s. That didn't change until '86 or '87, when Gorbachev reopened negotiations with Reagan over the START Treaty. Watching The Day After when it aired in '83 certainly didn't

CBS hasn't announced anything regarding shows in their "freshman" season. They've only made an announcement regarding their older shows. They're definitely going to renew Supergirl and Life in Pieces—they're both killing it, ratings-wise.

The Presidency.

I watch both Supergirl and The Flash, but if I had to choose just one, I'd choose Flash. It's just consistently good. I never would have dreamed that a show would make villains like Gorilla Grodd (a giant psychic gorilla!?) and King Shark (a giant man-shark!?) work, but The Flash pulls it off like it's the easiest

That's funny; not having any idea what Gadot's heritage was, I assumed the accent was done intentionally.

In the beginning when Lois was trying to interview the terrorist guy. He was the guy with Lois carrying a camera who turned out to be CIA, so the terrorists shot him in the head. At the time I thought, "Oh thank God, it's not Jimmy Olsen, it's just some CIA operative." Fucking Snyder.

Excellent. Now. Do we suspect there may be some kind of connection between Ben and Glory?

Loved Victorian Barmaid Clara. And Souffle Girl Clara was also better, IMO, than Main Clara. I think part of it was they seemed to know something the Doctor didn't, which is unexpected and interesting. They also both seemed incredibly capable (perhaps moreso than they should have).

"Did you see how gentle he was when he put Hammy back into her lunchbox? Squeeeeee!"

This checks out, my Mom and Dad went to a one-room school house in rural Wisconsin in the 50s. I'm not sure how many were left by '77 though—theirs were gone by then, subsumed into a larger elementary school.

I'm shocked—shocked I say!—that "In a Big Country" isn't listed here.

You're getting married and you think you've lost your despair and hopelessness? Just you wait!

I'm late, but I can't pass this up.

The vineyard is the big one, IMO. It's making cases and cases of wine people would like to drink because of the work and artistry that went into it. I'm sure there's a fairly large interest in goods created "the old fashioned way."