paradoxxfox
Paradox.Fox
paradoxxfox

Farscape for me too. 1999. It aired in Canada on YTV, a youth/children's TV network. I'd put on the channel to 'see what was on' and the pilot episode had me hooked. I was 13 at the time and the adventure and romance and more adult bend to things were captivating. (YTV ended up cancelling the show - they had

I'm 26, from a small town on the coast (BC), and we had milk in bags in my house until some point in the late 90's. I never really see it in grocery stores these days though (Vancouver now).

I don't generally hold hands with my female friends but we definitely link arms when we walk. (especially when it's cold out)

Ayn Rand seems to have a creepy brainwashing power over some 17-19 year olds. I had two very reasonable socially separate friends go through this post-Atlas Shrugged & Fountainhead haze only to come out of it six months to a year later wondering what happened.

Kind of off topic but just wondering - are you from Vancouver originally? (I ask only because although I'm currently a Vancouver resident I hail from small town coastal BC (escaped almost ten years ago) and that was the last place I'd heard anyone use the word cazsh! Now I'm wondering how widespread that word is...

Don't forget New Brunswick! The only officially bilingual province to my recollection (although definitely in the southern parts there are probably plenty of people who speak only English. Plus their French is of a unique variety.)

Hah. I guess once you cross the Rockies they really just throw in the towel on the whole French thing? (I mean it was still mandatory to learn French grades 6-8, though I'll never understand why they leave it so late.) Or maybe that was just my school. We did "learn" the French version but I don't know that we ever

I can see that. I know when I was in South America on an archaeology project, the four Canadians were quick to point out that they were not Americans when the locals asked if our group of 25 were all from the states. The fair assumption is always that you're American because of course the American populace so far

My sister spent two years living in Taiwan and despite Canada's sad cheese state, one of the biggest things she missed about home was the cheese. That and North American cake & pie. (The lack of good cheese and pastry/'real bread' are probably the biggest complaints about Canada that I hear from my European friends)

Maybe it's our commonwealth ties but I find a lot of Canadians have a romanticized view of English people. Like how having an English accent (no matter what region) automatically makes you 'fancy.' Even if they're critical enough to KNOW media portrayals and historic novels do not define the 'real' England, this

Yes, a friend who studied abroad in the UK (speaking as a Canadian, who despite their evident pride in drinking beer I have found are actually one of the less alcoholically inclined western nations) was shocked by how many pubs there were in a small University town. And by how full those pubs were with people just

I agree about how outgoing Americans are.

Aw that makes me sad to hear! I was pleasantly surprised to see my fellow Vancouverites leaping in to help a lost couple with their map and to pick up some travellers' dropped luggage on the skytrain. That said I think people here in this city are generally helpful and friendly to strangers but it's all very

Yes! Thank you. I'm always having to explain that.

I agree with you that Jack doesn't feel cliche. But regarding similar things (not exact, mind), characters like Max from Dark Angel and River Tam from Firefly and Blood+ (more Diva than Saya re: being held captive by the shadow organization and to be fair they didn't need to give them drugs) or Olivia from Fringe

Ugh, I worked that shift for a year and now working 7-3:30 has made all the difference for me. (People kept saying I'd adapt but I never felt rested. Mind you I also had trouble going to bed before 10pm...) Getting off at 2:30 is nice in that you have all that open-business-hours and day time to frolic about in, but

An interesting article was written concerning the joke le-a/ledasha: http://www.babynamewizard.com/archives/2009/10/ledasha-legends-and-race-part-one

I agree with you about how exciting it is to see kids realize the power of story telling. When I was in second grade, we had a teacher who introduced story writing in a really compelling way: she had one of those big art easels and asked us to define different parts of a story, illustrating them in response to our