mrnulldevice1
Eric
mrnulldevice1

I've heard the forester called "the perfect car for a retired lesbian."
I'm on my second one. I am neither retired nor a lesbian.
Food for thought.

What, no "z?"

Not to ruin a perfectly good joke but…man, read some of the ex-quiverfull stories and you'll feel ill. It's a terrifyingly dehumanizing movement.

Well, there's "watching the trainwreck" and "watching the trainwreck knowing that innocent bystanders are getting maimed."
It was (or appeared, thanks to good editing) cute and funny when they were their own weird little insular oddball cult, but now that it's clear that they're creepy people loose in the community

In Touch Magazine.
I'll say that again.
IN TOUCH MAGAZINE.
It's almost too easy.

Webster's New Abridged Becktionary: From Bzooty to Whiskeyclone

I can't help but think that the robot being named "Art" is a nod to Pearl Forrester always referring to Crow as "Art."

I did the math this morning, on a whim. Even with the continuing internet connection, and an annual addition of an HBO Now subscription (once it's out), and with the shows I buy from iTunes or whatnot…I'm still paying $500/year less than I was with cable (and no HBO).

You should be using the Prolapsr app. But don't swipe down.

It's also what Thomas Dolby named his studio/restored lifeboat.

The best 80's synthpop album of the 90's was Electronic's self-titled. Johhny Marr + Bernard Sumner? Heck yeah.

Somehow it recently made music news that a Polish synthpop duo covered A Broken Frame from front to back.

Wilder didn't usually write the hooks, but he knew how to find them and bring them out. Dude was - and is - a genius arranger and programmer.

Howard Jones is still performing and recording regularly. He still puts on one helluva show, too.

Last Year, Internet!

Something something Burt Ward…hey, this thing writes itself!

I assumed a) Viacom already had the rights and b) hey the kids were starting to get into that '60s hippie-retro stuff again, do we have any properties we can cash in on for a low investment?

I was just going to comment on the same thing. And I also just watched "Mr B Natural" this afternoon.

For real. Yaz was kind of underground in the US, compared to Vince Clarke's previous band, those Depeche fellows (or his next band, Erasure), but still, they were hugely influential. I can completely buy it as plausible that a teen into stuff just off the aminstream in the early/mid 80's would be into Yaz. (sadly,

Mick Skinner's native accent is Brummie, but his "stage accent" isn't. Much more south London.