ursulacallistis
ursulacallistis
ursulacallistis

After teaching myself to alter patterns and make my own clothing that actually fits and is flattering a few years, I'm moving on to more complicated patterns. I finally perfected a princess line dress pattern for a cosplay I intend to wear to an anime convention in January. I also want to tackle a pencil skirt

"So many ways to make mistakes, so little room for error, and less room for forgiveness."

I supposed that depends on what she's offered to cook. It it's your liver with fava beans, probably a trap.

I started bike riding 7 miles at least 3 times a week last summer. Towards the end of the summer I started going to the gym in preparation of the days getting shorter—I would bike in the evening. I added some weight training as well for arms and abs. Almost a year later and while I can see some improvement with my

I grew up in Cleveland and when this movie was being filmed I was in 11th grade. I was downtown for some school event and a few of my classmates and I decided to sneak out early. I walked over to Higbees (mostly to kind of hide because it occurred to me I might encounter my dad on his lunch break). This was in the

Actually, upon reflection and some internet searching, I think it was just that you could get an ID made, and since it wasn't official like the BMV, they didn't really ask any questions. So the potential for a fake ID was pretty high.

I remember it being kind of a big deal that they chose to have the rating and Viewer Discretion. I'm pretty sure it had to do with the incest story line, rather than the violence. And I didn't find it that disturbing an episode, compared to any of the others.

I have vague memories of being able to do this in the early 80's. Probably sold as a novelty item, you could get any state, and it would have your picture and whatever birth date you wanted. I thought I remembered kids from my high school doing it, but it's possible I have created this memory

Didn't Viewer Discretion start in 1996? The X-Files episode "Home" had both a viewer discretion warning and a TV-MA warning when it aired in October 1996

I put the strike on the downstroke of the 7, but I think that has roots in my desire to seem European when I was younger. The slash through the zero is a leftover from my high school math classes.

As well as fake IDs at booth in the back. Or maybe that was just the one downtown.

I was 30. I had no interest in the books until the fourth one came out and finally decided to give them a try. I was both entranced and a little disappointed that they hadn't been written when I was much younger.

I liked the finale. I had stopped watching Roseanne for a while by then—I think maybe I missed the last two seasons. But I'd seen an episode here and then so knew it was getting pretty outlandish. The finale did a good job tying back into an earlier episode where the family makes a room in the basement for her to

They would kind of have to, wouldn't they? Dan's death wasn't the only thing changed in the finale, pretty much the entire show had been rearranged.

Wow, even more views than the little girl singing Super Bass?

I feel I used to know someone who had problems with someone using his detergent when he was living in an apartment so he mixed Rit Dye into a decoy box of detergent. But I could just be inventing this memory (the person existed, the detergent stealing existed, the Rit Dye might not)

That's pretty much where I draw the line as well.

Wait, did he throw the smokers into the trash barrels or their cigarettes?

Yeah, I don't really think it seems that terrible. The only thing I find marginally objectionable is that it sort of seems like her reaction to the little girl's memory of not having money for her grandfather's funeral is "This! This is the child! This is the sort of traumatic memory that will make her acting ring

Clearly it was Wanksy