- Watching the X-Files pilot episode on a TV that's older than the tv show. This is awesome ->
- @kakapojayne OH MAN Have you seen Blood? He is SMOKIN' HOT in it in reply to kakapojayne ->
- @ErisLovesMovies It sounds like it's about some of the stuff I covered studying Philosophy of Computer Science. HMM in reply to ErisLovesMovies ->
- @kakapojayne Also it has Paul Bettany and other people. BUT MARK STRONG in reply to kakapojayne ->
- @ErisLovesMovies WELL my essay for that module was on whether or not an AI could go to heaven & the nature of the soul. I AM EXCITED ANYWAY in reply to ErisLovesMovies ->
- @ErisLovesMovies PAH. I want an investigation of whether an AI is alive or has a soul or a spirit or can believe or whatever. I'll still go in reply to ErisLovesMovies ->
- RT @SFXmagazine: It's been in development hell for years, but Deadpool movie to finally start shooting in March http://t.co/8PcxZOmGyh ->
- @ErisLovesMovies IN FAIRNESS it would have Hayley Atwell, Monica Bellucci, Keanu Reeves and Richard Armitage in it if they did in reply to ErisLovesMovies ->
- @ErisLovesMovies Actually, Spielberg's A.I. kind of addresses the realness of an artificial intelligence in reply to ErisLovesMovies ->
- @EmApocalyptic @kierongillen "What are your top ten cake-related puns?" "What tea is the most goth? Does it have to be black tea?" in reply to EmApocalyptic ->
- @EmApocalyptic @kierongillen What would he do if he was @McKelvie for a day? in reply to EmApocalyptic ->
- @ErisLovesMovies Hahahaha.It's kind of improved with age for me. In S:AAB they just accept that the AIs are "real" right? in reply to ErisLovesMovies ->
- RT @Jook: 123 DAYS UNTIL EUROVISION!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ->
- @ErisLovesMovies well of course they are going to be worst to humans than robots! in reply to ErisLovesMovies ->
- @ErisLovesMovies Yesssssss. I loved also that the love triangle they planned at the start didn't really pan out that way in reply to ErisLovesMovies ->
- @ErisLovesMovies I loved them ALL. ALLLLLLLLLL. Did you see that site about a second series? in reply to ErisLovesMovies ->
- @ErisLovesMovies Oh yeah everyone is like… 20 years older so it could never be the same people in reply to ErisLovesMovies ->
- @ErisLovesMovies This is an EPIC fanfiction thing from 2001 http://t.co/FRV0934X2P in reply to ErisLovesMovies ->
- @MadeFromCorpses Were there many for whom it was their only source of income? in reply to MadeFromCorpses ->
- @MadeFromCorpses I wonder if they get paid differently because it will be web-only. in reply to MadeFromCorpses ->
- @ImpactSports9 Well since peanut butter is just wrong, I pick the apple in reply to ImpactSports9 ->
- RT @ClickHole: Find Out What @Renner4Real, @ellarcoltrane, And @SenWarren Have To Say http://t.co/Hgt1SogRan #TheySaidWHAT http://t.co/Jsvq… ->
- @Ghostlight_Ross Totally manageable in reply to Ghostlight_Ross ->
- The ONE thing I don't like about Dana Scully is how unexcited she is about space shuttle launches ->
- RT @cg_williams: Weird advert from @VodafoneUK in Paddington Station. That big, lit-up building is @EE headquarters… http://t.co/7mr5qBb1… ->
- @tambourine I AM dead behind the eyes. That's spooky in reply to tambourine ->
- RT @BFI: Also out this month is a stunning restoration of The Battles of Coronel and Falkland Islands http://t.co/7hCnzBdMlf http://t.co/ae… ->
- I saw some of that film being restored when I visited the BFI archive! ->
- RT @piratemoggy: Do YOU have things to say about comics and/or manga? Esp looking for people who aren't white cis men for Nine Worlds, DM m… ->
- @sebpatrick Hahah no because I did actually learn when I was younger and practicing is the WORST in reply to sebpatrick ->
- @sebpatrick Not even getting into BF5 while I was learning made me more inspired to practice. I did bluffed my way through the exams somehow in reply to herdivineshadow ->
- @MadeFromCorpses hahaha I'm up to Beyond the Sea so far this week in reply to MadeFromCorpses ->
- X-Files keeps playing snippets of the creepy Tooms music ->
- @nikki Nooo. I've been using the awful smelling hemp body shop stuff which works really well even though it is awful in reply to nikki ->
Monthly Archives: January 2015
Tweets for 2015-01-19
- RT @rhysjamesy: It's weird how the phrase "Correct me if I'm wrong" means "I am absolutely 100% correct and if you try to correct me I'll c… ->
- RT @kirstyharrod: My favourite thing about Greek is that there's a direct translation for "yo-ho-ho." Y'know, like pirates say. ->
- @piratemoggy The mere mention of the word competency has me wondering about Pepper Potts/Tony Stark/Phil Coulson in reply to piratemoggy ->
- Mum's put on one of my Dad's CDs and it alleges to be James Bond themes but it is clearly cheap re-recordings. We are baffled ->
- @Hello_Tailor I am disappointed in reply to Hello_Tailor ->
- @piratemoggy I've… mostly been thinking of a Charlie's Angels with Pepper as Charlie and May, Hill and Romanoff as Angels in reply to piratemoggy ->
- Equality monitoring forms are the bane of my existence. ->
- WHY IS "IRISH" LISTED AS AN ETHNIC ORIGIN OPTION AND NOT "MIXED"? ->
- Do not get me started on the whole Asian-Chinese-literally what about the whole rest of Asia issue ->
- @LouisatheLast I feel like Paul Bettany must have done enough films and adverts and things that an enterprising person could do this in reply to LouisatheLast ->
- @AnthonySteele I suspect that the places advertising these jobs have to keep an eye on their diversity practices by law in reply to AnthonySteele ->
- @AnthonySteele If I'm left with only the "other" box though, they are going to get as vague an answer as I can manage. in reply to herdivineshadow ->
- @AnthonySteele Then if they feel they have to actually ask me to my face, they can squirm about how to ask properly. in reply to AnthonySteele ->
- ACTUALLY still having "Irish" as a separate category to "white" is… kind of offensive. ->
- I mean, this kind of sign was still about in the 50s and 60s SO http://t.co/ZmonA0rpNO ->
- RT @ErinClaiborne: GUYS it is TWO THOUSAND FIFTEEN and I'm still crying over Bucky Barnes. ->
- Transcalar Investment Vehicles and Marvel’s Agents of SHIELD… http://t.co/xotzWKPmiQ ->
- RT @RCArmitager_CN: http://t.co/1XEdCHr4G9 via Peter Jackson's Weibo http://t.co/ibGkbL0vpS ->
- @OllieMogs sexual orientation not inquired about on this particular form, at least. in reply to OllieMogs ->
- RT @NoContextGames: "Are you a man or a woman?"
“I’m a villain.”
“What gender are you?”
“Evil.”
“Yeah, but what’s in your pants?”
“Doom.” -> - @ChrissieM I like to stand there putting off any man attempting to buy them in reply to ChrissieM ->
Tweets for 2015-01-18
- @tambourine I'm watching Hannibal with my mum but via Lovefilm dvds so it's…not too bad really. We usually watch during dinner in reply to tambourine ->
- @tambourine WELL the ones for the BBC Robin Hood are a delight because Lucy Griffiths is going on about how great Richard Armitage is… in reply to tambourine ->
- @tambourine …and like Jonas Armstrong (Robin Hood) is sitting there going "BUT WHAT ABOUT ROBIN, LADY MARIAN HMM?" in reply to tambourine ->
- @tambourine The Push commentary is kind of adorable cos it's the director Paul McGuigan with Chris Evans and Dakota Fanning & it is so cute in reply to tambourine ->
- @tambourine ALSO actually the Region 2 DVD boxset of Space: Above and Beyond has commentaries they recorded specially for it in 2012 in reply to tambourine ->
- @tambourine and like. It is so great to hear them talk about it 20 years on. in reply to tambourine ->
- @tambourine ALSO of course the science commentary from Dr Brian Cox on Sunshine is VITAL cos he doesn't really do movie commentaries in reply to tambourine ->
- @JamesHunt Haha this one is just him on his own talking about the science, occasionally going "of course this is totally wrong" and waffling in reply to JamesHunt ->
- RT @earlymodernjohn: "Shit, I've forgotten the beginning of Beowulf!"
"Say 'Hwæt!'"
"I said I've forgotten the beginning of Beowulf!" -> - SOMETIMES I look at a photo of Gerard Way and wonder "Is he related to Keira Knightley somehow?" ->
- @platinumvampyr :O That is the bucky bear I have. Only mine doesn't get ubersnuggled by Cap Dog in reply to platinumvampyr ->
- RT @markymarket: ..so I still need a lodger from Feb to share my big flat in N22. Single room, £430pm incl bills and free bacon, close to t… ->
- @ErisLovesMovies YES THIS. LFF week etc tends to involve bringing a packed lunch for me & eating sandwiches in cinemas in reply to ErisLovesMovies ->
Transcalar Investment Vehicles and Marvel’s Agents of SHIELD
So, at last year’s London Film Festival, I went to see some experimental short films and Transcalar Investment Vehicles was one of them, but unfortunately the version of the film they had at the festival wasn’t the correct final version. Anyway, the LFF peeps said they’d show the right one at a later date and that there would be free tickets for the people who had turned up for this showing.
The rescheduled showing of Transcalar Investment Vehicles was last week. I… don’t know if the right version of the film conveyed Koob-Sassen’s ideas more effectively than the wrong version but then I guess experimental cinema isn’t something that I’m particularly into or have a lot of experience watching. I’m more of a regular narrative film viewer, I guess. Saying that, I did enjoy the experience and I think that sticking around for the Q & A afterwards was really worthwhile, not least because people who actually “get” this style of film were making interesting comments and asking questions and maybe the discussion part of the evening was more enjoyable than the actual film? It’s hard to tell.
MY POINT, THOUGH (I have one, I swear), is that in the film there is a financier character, whose scheme is to channel investment made in fossil and nuclear energy industries into some kind of north African solar panel development in the wake of oil tanker and nuclear plant disasters. We meet the financier mostly while he’s explaining what this scheme involves to an American political speechwriter (played awesomely by Chipo Chung who I hadn’t really heard of before seeing this but I really enjoyed her performance*). In the course of the post-film discussion, Koob-Sassen talked about how the financier in this story was a “heroic financier” – something I hadn’t considered at all. I mean, at the moment, when you think about anyone involved in the financial services industry, they are pretty much always coloured as the bad guys – thanks to all the economic problems of the last few years. Then in the course of his discussion with the speechwriter, you kind of get the idea that the stuff he’s talking about is a bit out there and has the potential to be very bad – based on the reaction expressions of the speechwriter (who of course has to spin the topic to her audience in a favourable way later). The financier seems to have a grasp of and solutions for things on a large-scale but at the same time, seems kind of unaware of the effects of his solutions on smaller, person-to-person levels.
If I understood the finance stuff better, maybe I would see how the financier is heroic better too.
ON THE OTHER HAND, it got me thinking about the various hero and villain stories that make up nearly all the superhero films, comics and TV shows that I seem to be watching non-stop at the moment. The thing that often comes up is the idea that the villain is the hero of his own story. From the POV of the villain in the story, he is the hero. MOSTLY it makes me think about Ward from Agents of SHIELD. Ward is a TERRIBLE person. TERRIBLE. Yet he continues to act like nothing he is doing is wrong (he’s been murdering and betraying people ALL OVER THE SHOP).
And then that makes me think about the character of Skye and, totally unrelated to the stuff I’ve been talking about so far, how the character is mixed race (Chinese & White) and how AWESOME this is because I’ve pretty much seen…. no one like me on TV. I suppose Keanu Reeves in 47 Ronin SORT OF counts if you grasp at straws a bit. SKYE. FOREVER AWESOME.
* Looking on IMDB it turns out that she has been in like… all the things ever that I loved. She was Chantho in Doctor Who. She was the voice of the ship, Icarus, in one of my FAVOURITE FILMS EVER – Sunshine.
Mirrored from half girl, half robot.
comments
Transcalar Investment Vehicles and Marvel’s Agents of SHIELD
So, at last year’s London Film Festival, I went to see some experimental short films and Transcalar Investment Vehicles was one of them, but unfortunately the version of the film they had at the festival wasn’t the correct final version. Anyway, the LFF peeps said they’d show the right one at a later date and that there would be free tickets for the people who had turned up for this showing.
The rescheduled showing of Transcalar Investment Vehicles was last week. I… don’t know if the right version of the film conveyed Koob-Sassen’s ideas more effectively than the wrong version but then I guess experimental cinema isn’t something that I’m particularly into or have a lot of experience watching. I’m more of a regular narrative film viewer, I guess. Saying that, I did enjoy the experience and I think that sticking around for the Q & A afterwards was really worthwhile, not least because people who actually “get” this style of film were making interesting comments and asking questions and maybe the discussion part of the evening was more enjoyable than the actual film? It’s hard to tell.
MY POINT, THOUGH (I have one, I swear), is that in the film there is a financier character, whose scheme is to channel investment made in fossil and nuclear energy industries into some kind of north African solar panel development in the wake of oil tanker and nuclear plant disasters. We meet the financier mostly while he’s explaining what this scheme involves to an American political speechwriter (played awesomely by Chipo Chung who I hadn’t really heard of before seeing this but I really enjoyed her performance*). In the course of the post-film discussion, Koob-Sassen talked about how the financier in this story was a “heroic financier” – something I hadn’t considered at all. I mean, at the moment, when you think about anyone involved in the financial services industry, they are pretty much always coloured as the bad guys – thanks to all the economic problems of the last few years. Then in the course of his discussion with the speechwriter, you kind of get the idea that the stuff he’s talking about is a bit out there and has the potential to be very bad – based on the reaction expressions of the speechwriter (who of course has to spin the topic to her audience in a favourable way later). The financier seems to have a grasp of and solutions for things on a large-scale but at the same time, seems kind of unaware of the effects of his solutions on smaller, person-to-person levels.
If I understood the finance stuff better, maybe I would see how the financier is heroic better too.
ON THE OTHER HAND, it got me thinking about the various hero and villain stories that make up nearly all the superhero films, comics and TV shows that I seem to be watching non-stop at the moment. The thing that often comes up is the idea that the villain is the hero of his own story. From the POV of the villain in the story, he is the hero. MOSTLY it makes me think about Ward from Agents of SHIELD. Ward is a TERRIBLE person. TERRIBLE. Yet he continues to act like nothing he is doing is wrong (he’s been murdering and betraying people ALL OVER THE SHOP).
And then that makes me think about the character of Skye and, totally unrelated to the stuff I’ve been talking about so far, how the character is mixed race (Chinese & White) and how AWESOME this is because I’ve pretty much seen…. no one like me on TV. I suppose Keanu Reeves in 47 Ronin SORT OF counts if you grasp at straws a bit. SKYE. FOREVER AWESOME.
* Looking on IMDB it turns out that she has been in like… all the things ever that I loved. She was Chantho in Doctor Who. She was the voice of the ship, Icarus, in one of my FAVOURITE FILMS EVER – Sunshine.
Mirrored from half girl, half robot.
comments
Transcalar Investment Vehicles and Marvel’s Agents of SHIELD
So, at last year’s London Film Festival, I went to see some experimental short films and Transcalar Investment Vehicles was one of them, but unfortunately the version of the film they had at the festival wasn’t the correct final version. Anyway, the LFF peeps said they’d show the right one at a later date and that there would be free tickets for the people who had turned up for this showing.
The rescheduled showing of Transcalar Investment Vehicles was last week. I… don’t know if the right version of the film conveyed Koob-Sassen’s ideas more effectively than the wrong version but then I guess experimental cinema isn’t something that I’m particularly into or have a lot of experience watching. I’m more of a regular narrative film viewer, I guess. Saying that, I did enjoy the experience and I think that sticking around for the Q & A afterwards was really worthwhile, not least because people who actually “get” this style of film were making interesting comments and asking questions and maybe the discussion part of the evening was more enjoyable than the actual film? It’s hard to tell.
MY POINT, THOUGH (I have one, I swear), is that in the film there is a financier character, whose scheme is to channel investment made in fossil and nuclear energy industries into some kind of north African solar panel development in the wake of oil tanker and nuclear plant disasters. We meet the financier mostly while he’s explaining what this scheme involves to an American political speechwriter (played awesomely by Chipo Chung who I hadn’t really heard of before seeing this but I really enjoyed her performance*). In the course of the post-film discussion, Koob-Sassen talked about how the financier in this story was a “heroic financier” – something I hadn’t considered at all. I mean, at the moment, when you think about anyone involved in the financial services industry, they are pretty much always coloured as the bad guys – thanks to all the economic problems of the last few years. Then in the course of his discussion with the speechwriter, you kind of get the idea that the stuff he’s talking about is a bit out there and has the potential to be very bad – based on the reaction expressions of the speechwriter (who of course has to spin the topic to her audience in a favourable way later). The financier seems to have a grasp of and solutions for things on a large-scale but at the same time, seems kind of unaware of the effects of his solutions on smaller, person-to-person levels.
If I understood the finance stuff better, maybe I would see how the financier is heroic better too.
ON THE OTHER HAND, it got me thinking about the various hero and villain stories that make up nearly all the superhero films, comics and TV shows that I seem to be watching non-stop at the moment. The thing that often comes up is the idea that the villain is the hero of his own story. From the POV of the villain in the story, he is the hero. MOSTLY it makes me think about Ward from Agents of SHIELD. Ward is a TERRIBLE person. TERRIBLE. Yet he continues to act like nothing he is doing is wrong (he’s been murdering and betraying people ALL OVER THE SHOP).
And then that makes me think about the character of Skye and, totally unrelated to the stuff I’ve been talking about so far, how the character is mixed race (Chinese & White) and how AWESOME this is because I’ve pretty much seen…. no one like me on TV. I suppose Keanu Reeves in 47 Ronin SORT OF counts if you grasp at straws a bit. SKYE. FOREVER AWESOME.
* Looking on IMDB it turns out that she has been in like… all the things ever that I loved. She was Chantho in Doctor Who. She was the voice of the ship, Icarus, in one of my FAVOURITE FILMS EVER – Sunshine.
Mirrored from half girl, half robot.
Transcalar Investment Vehicles and Marvel’s Agents of SHIELD
So, at last year’s London Film Festival, I went to see some experimental short films and Transcalar Investment Vehicles was one of them, but unfortunately the version of the film they had at the festival wasn’t the correct final version. Anyway, the LFF peeps said they’d show the right one at a later date and that there would be free tickets for the people who had turned up for this showing.
The rescheduled showing of Transcalar Investment Vehicles was last week. I… don’t know if the right version of the film conveyed Koob-Sassen’s ideas more effectively than the wrong version but then I guess experimental cinema isn’t something that I’m particularly into or have a lot of experience watching. I’m more of a regular narrative film viewer, I guess. Saying that, I did enjoy the experience and I think that sticking around for the Q & A afterwards was really worthwhile, not least because people who actually “get” this style of film were making interesting comments and asking questions and maybe the discussion part of the evening was more enjoyable than the actual film? It’s hard to tell.
MY POINT, THOUGH (I have one, I swear), is that in the film there is a financier character, whose scheme is to channel investment made in fossil and nuclear energy industries into some kind of north African solar panel development in the wake of oil tanker and nuclear plant disasters. We meet the financier mostly while he’s explaining what this scheme involves to an American political speechwriter (played awesomely by Chipo Chung who I hadn’t really heard of before seeing this but I really enjoyed her performance*). In the course of the post-film discussion, Koob-Sassen talked about how the financier in this story was a “heroic financier” – something I hadn’t considered at all. I mean, at the moment, when you think about anyone involved in the financial services industry, they are pretty much always coloured as the bad guys – thanks to all the economic problems of the last few years. Then in the course of his discussion with the speechwriter, you kind of get the idea that the stuff he’s talking about is a bit out there and has the potential to be very bad – based on the reaction expressions of the speechwriter (who of course has to spin the topic to her audience in a favourable way later). The financier seems to have a grasp of and solutions for things on a large-scale but at the same time, seems kind of unaware of the effects of his solutions on smaller, person-to-person levels.
If I understood the finance stuff better, maybe I would see how the financier is heroic better too.
ON THE OTHER HAND, it got me thinking about the various hero and villain stories that make up nearly all the superhero films, comics and TV shows that I seem to be watching non-stop at the moment. The thing that often comes up is the idea that the villain is the hero of his own story. From the POV of the villain in the story, he is the hero. MOSTLY it makes me think about Ward from Agents of SHIELD. Ward is a TERRIBLE person. TERRIBLE. Yet he continues to act like nothing he is doing is wrong (he’s been murdering and betraying people ALL OVER THE SHOP).
And then that makes me think about the character of Skye and, totally unrelated to the stuff I’ve been talking about so far, how the character is mixed race (Chinese & White) and how AWESOME this is because I’ve pretty much seen…. no one like me on TV. I suppose Keanu Reeves in 47 Ronin SORT OF counts if you grasp at straws a bit. SKYE. FOREVER AWESOME.
* Looking on IMDB it turns out that she has been in like… all the things ever that I loved. She was Chantho in Doctor Who. She was the voice of the ship, Icarus, in one of my FAVOURITE FILMS EVER – Sunshine.
Mirrored from half girl, half robot.
comments
Transcalar Investment Vehicles and Marvel’s Agents of SHIELD
So, at last year’s London Film Festival, I went to see some experimental short films and Transcalar Investment Vehicles was one of them, but unfortunately the version of the film they had at the festival wasn’t the correct final version. Anyway, the LFF peeps said they’d show the right one at a later date and that there would be free tickets for the people who had turned up for this showing.
The rescheduled showing of Transcalar Investment Vehicles was last week. I… don’t know if the right version of the film conveyed Koob-Sassen’s ideas more effectively than the wrong version but then I guess experimental cinema isn’t something that I’m particularly into or have a lot of experience watching. I’m more of a regular narrative film viewer, I guess. Saying that, I did enjoy the experience and I think that sticking around for the Q & A afterwards was really worthwhile, not least because people who actually “get” this style of film were making interesting comments and asking questions and maybe the discussion part of the evening was more enjoyable than the actual film? It’s hard to tell.
MY POINT, THOUGH (I have one, I swear), is that in the film there is a financier character, whose scheme is to channel investment made in fossil and nuclear energy industries into some kind of north African solar panel development in the wake of oil tanker and nuclear plant disasters. We meet the financier mostly while he’s explaining what this scheme involves to an American political speechwriter (played awesomely by Chipo Chung who I hadn’t really heard of before seeing this but I really enjoyed her performance*). In the course of the post-film discussion, Koob-Sassen talked about how the financier in this story was a “heroic financier” – something I hadn’t considered at all. I mean, at the moment, when you think about anyone involved in the financial services industry, they are pretty much always coloured as the bad guys – thanks to all the economic problems of the last few years. Then in the course of his discussion with the speechwriter, you kind of get the idea that the stuff he’s talking about is a bit out there and has the potential to be very bad – based on the reaction expressions of the speechwriter (who of course has to spin the topic to her audience in a favourable way later). The financier seems to have a grasp of and solutions for things on a large-scale but at the same time, seems kind of unaware of the effects of his solutions on smaller, person-to-person levels.
If I understood the finance stuff better, maybe I would see how the financier is heroic better too.
ON THE OTHER HAND, it got me thinking about the various hero and villain stories that make up nearly all the superhero films, comics and TV shows that I seem to be watching non-stop at the moment. The thing that often comes up is the idea that the villain is the hero of his own story. From the POV of the villain in the story, he is the hero. MOSTLY it makes me think about Ward from Agents of SHIELD. Ward is a TERRIBLE person. TERRIBLE. Yet he continues to act like nothing he is doing is wrong (he’s been murdering and betraying people ALL OVER THE SHOP).
And then that makes me think about the character of Skye and, totally unrelated to the stuff I’ve been talking about so far, how the character is mixed race (Chinese & White) and how AWESOME this is because I’ve pretty much seen…. no one like me on TV. I suppose Keanu Reeves in 47 Ronin SORT OF counts if you grasp at straws a bit. SKYE. FOREVER AWESOME.
* Looking on IMDB it turns out that she has been in like… all the things ever that I loved. She was Chantho in Doctor Who. She was the voice of the ship, Icarus, in one of my FAVOURITE FILMS EVER – Sunshine.
Tweets for 2015-01-17
- @ErisLovesMovies YESSssss I am glad that I was thinking about this the other day. I told you about my dream of Peggy & Steve smooching yeah? in reply to ErisLovesMovies ->
- @ErisLovesMovies There was Peggy Carter and there was Steve Rogers & they were SUCKING FACE. It felt like they were skinny dipping? Unsure in reply to ErisLovesMovies ->
- @ErisLovesMovies You are lucky I remember even that heh. Now I am off the tablets I was on before, I remember NOTHING of my dreams in reply to ErisLovesMovies ->
- @ErisLovesMovies OTOH back then it would have been way more surreal SO in reply to ErisLovesMovies ->
- @ErisLovesMovies Pretty much, yeah. It was the kind of surreal mind-altering drugs really excel at in reply to ErisLovesMovies ->
- @ErisLovesMovies Hah HE WAS IN ONE OF THEM. And there was one where I was Steve Rogers. Super vivid & super surreal = super entertaining in reply to ErisLovesMovies ->
- @ErisLovesMovies hahah no. Normally when I dream, I know I'm dreaming. On these I didn't. WEIIIRD in reply to ErisLovesMovies ->
- @canada_bear THEY ARE plus they are wrapped different which is weird in reply to canada_bear ->
- RT @BeardedGenius: God I love him so much.
Cantona on Islamophobia: http://t.co/nPA3Q03b6N ->
- @sebpatrick Reading timeline old – new, have just realised you weren't talking about something inspired by that gate in Belgium in reply to sebpatrick ->
- RT @baal_merodach: I'm still inordinately proud of teaching Saul to say 'That would be an ecumenical matter' as a very young child. ->
- RT @doctorow: Lying down in bed desk http://t.co/modZqe7C4F http://t.co/gm0Y2fcqgW ->
- RT @AndrewMaleMojo: The best ever review of Lady Chatterley's Lover was in an American publication called Field and Stream: http://t.co/J9e… ->
- @bigfinish @MinettaLane I want both. Both is good. #bfd6 in reply to bigfinish ->
- @liquidparanoia @bigfinish @MinettaLane But combined! Mind-swapping IN WW1! in reply to liquidparanoia ->
- @Perkins28 I don't understand how they are doing it. This is amazing in reply to Perkins28 ->
- @piratemoggy You also need a sedan chair to go with it so you don't trail the cape in the snow-leavings in reply to piratemoggy ->
- Red cabbage fried with shitake mushrooms and stilton mmmm ->
- @piratemoggy INTERESTING WEIRD SEDAN CHAIR FACT. At my Ah-ma's funeral, along with a paper house & car, we burned a paper sedan chair in reply to piratemoggy ->
- @piratemoggy BUT THEN she also had a pearl in her mouth to light her way SO in reply to piratemoggy ->
- @Hello_Tailor I just assumed they were in love. in reply to Hello_Tailor ->
- Watching Priest on Film4. I <3 it. It's got all that religious stuff AND vampires ->
- RT @Gingerhazing: i think i've been waiting my whole life for the words "sean bean is half-bee" and I didn't even know it ->
- RT @Gingerhazing: SEAN BEE-N ->
- @DHLinton SEE from this I would assume he only read the most intelligent things ever in reply to DHLinton ->
Tweets for 2015-01-16
- @frankturner so envious in reply to frankturner ->
- Mum has been asking this old lady so many questions about sheep that the old lady's asked if she's going to become a shepherdess ->
- RT @AbrasiveShrub: "4,000 meals a day" is an impressively creative way of writing "fewer than two meals per person per day". http://t.co/y8… ->
- @mrtonylee WELL I feel like John Wick would be if I saw it (aside from sad dog-related happenings) in reply to mrtonylee ->
- @charliesaidthat @piratemoggy @EwaSR Literally only just realised you did not mean "fraggles" in reply to charliesaidthat ->
- The problem with seeing text in Malay and similar languages is that I feel familiar and something I understand. Only I don't ->
- RT @HClaytonWright: Pam St Clement is releasing a book called The End of an Earring and both cover and author description are amazing. http… ->
- Looking at the page of things I've posted on reddit & seen this gem: "You'd starve, before you could build a commercial manure empire." ->
- YES. VICTORY. I have remembered to turn the TV on to watch an episode of Scooby Doo from the start ->
- @AgentM If there's not something involving these two and Turkish oil wrestling somewhere, I shall be disappointed in reply to AgentM ->
- @ErisLovesMovies AHHHHHHHHH @MarkDoesStuff is going to watch KINGS. AAAAH ->
- RT @LeftSentThis: Two white teens are on a "crime spree" with .45- and .38-caliber handguns, and NBC labels them "teen sweethearts." http:/… ->
- @newloveletter YOU ARE AWESOME in reply to newloveletter ->
- Doing the Coursera course about the Magna Carta. Weirdly overexcited. ->
- @tambourine That's kind of my idea of funtimes except I would miss out the beer. in reply to tambourine ->
- @tambourine …are you basically me but with added beer? in reply to tambourine ->
- I already ate dinner but now I want the texture of sweet & sour prawn balls from my local takeaway. ->
- @tambourine This is a v. tempting proposition in reply to tambourine ->
- @charliesaidthat That looks like delicious delicious jelly. I must eat jelly now. in reply to charliesaidthat ->
- @charliesaidthat either cola or raspberry. in reply to charliesaidthat ->
- @charliesaidthat but loads of sweets and fizzy drinks are blue raspberry flavour? HMM let me investigate in reply to charliesaidthat ->
- @charliesaidthat ahah well that was easy wikipedia has already considered this conundrum http://t.co/Rs1RseB4Zd in reply to charliesaidthat ->
- @charliesaidthat Blue raspberry fizzy pop was my beverage of choice to buy from… the post office. uh in reply to charliesaidthat ->
- RT @maggiekb1: My new favorite Wikipedia list: http://t.co/mfAz1prFnP ->
- the dark chocolate and coconut ferrero rocher are really disappointing ->
- @DHLinton What if Porthos was sitting in a room with mannequins wearing Warren's outfits? in reply to DHLinton ->
- MUSKETEERS IN A FORNIGHT? I did not authorise this what is happening next Friday night? ->
- @SimonStirrat No, that would have been publicised for weeks beforehand. It is probably a sports thing in reply to SimonStirrat ->
- Stall in my local market has just advertised remote control drones as "boys toys" which… has put me off buying one from them. ->
- I wonder if an Amazon drone could deliver a drone to me. It would be like dronceception ->