On This Day: May 12

Since I’ll hit 20 years of blogging this November, this year I’m posting a daily list of anything I published on this day in the past.

There are 24 posts previously published on May 12th

  • 2023
    • Year 50 Day 10 One definite benefit to working in academia is a more permissive dress code than many corporate jobs allow.
  • 2021
    • 📚 19/2021: _Patience & Esther_ by S.W. Searle ⭐️⭐️⭐️ A sweet and nicely non-stressful (as in, no major drama or conflict) romance between two lower-class women in Edwardian England. Many nice historical details about the time…and oh, yeah, occasional explicit sex scenes.
  • 2020
    • While there's never a good time to have an internet outage, in the midst of a pandemic when both people in the house work from home and depend on 'net access for both work and socializing is a really, _really_ bad time.
    • On This Day: May 12 Recognizing 20 years of blogging, here are my past posts from May 12
  • 2019
    • The rust upon / the roof of tin / shall see your heart / and know your sin.
  • 2018
    • Gorgeous evening for dinner outside.
    • Almost walked into this spider on our patio.
    • Prairie’s prettying up our patio with impatiens!
    • How romance novels are getting a makeover in the Trump era
  • 2016
    • When was the last time you saw a real blackboard?!?
    • Fun project today: photographing a collection of law enforcement badges and shields.
  • 2014
    • Nothing like diving into a good book.
  • 2010
    • Links for May 9th through May 12th Sometime between May 9th and May 12th, I thought this stuff was interesting. You might think so too! • The 7 Most Soul-Crushing Series Finales in TV History • The Blackboard Versus the Keyboard • 50th Anniversary of the Pill: Love, Sex, Freedom and Paradox • Why Roger Ebert Hates 3-D (And You Should Too) • The Evolution of Privacy on Facebook
  • 2006
    • coComment Enabled coComment is a service that lets you track the comments you've made on other weblogs, keep track of when people have responded to them, and so on...basically, trying to make sure that those comments you leave don't just disappear into the great bit bucket of the 'net.
  • 2005
    • Star Wars Tech Geeking It's no great surprise that I've just managed to loose three hours of my evening immersed in the Star Wars Technical Commentaries, a site devoted to extrapolating rather amazing amounts of data out of the Star Wars universe.
    • Flickr’s on a roll Okay, so maybe this whole brouhaha about Flickr being purchased by Yahoo wasn't such a bad thing after all. They've been on a pretty good roll recently, as evidenced by their news page...
  • 2004
    • Mac OS X Word 2004 Demo Trojan For the second time in just over a month, panicky news stories are alerting us about a trojan horse attack against Mac OS X. Last time the exploit was disguised as an .mp3 file, this month it's disguised as a Microsoft Word beta installer.
    • Silly quiz time I've mentioned Something Positive a time or two in the past, but in case you've missed it, it's a great little web comic. Highly recommended. So when I stumbled across this quiz tonight, I had to take it…
    • Why bother buying ink? Why even bother buying ink anymore? Seems to me that it's practically more cost effective to just buy a printer and use it until the ink runs out, junk it, and buy a new one. Go for a cheaper printer, and I'd be willing to bet that it is cheaper to treat them as a 'disposable' item.
  • 2003
    • Secretary A fascinating portrayal of two people breaking out of their respective self-imposed psychological prisons to find support and love through a light S&M, D/s relationship.
    • About a Boy Hugh Grant plays his 'charming slimeball' routine to a T, as the world's shallowest bachelor who finds acceptance, and hidden depths, after stumbling into becoming a surrogate father figure for the quirky son of a troubled single mom. Quite enjoyable, with a lot of cute lines.
    • Today's vocabulary Why is it that one can busta rhyme or busta move anywhere but you must bust a cap in someone's ass? Is 'ho' always feminine, and 'muthafucka' always masculine, while 'bitch' can be either? How many peeps in a posse, how much booty before baby got back, do you have to be all that to be all up in that, and do I need to be dope and phat to be da bomb or can I just be 'stupid'?
  • 2002
    • Music, books and other real-world fun Back in the summer of 1991, right after I graduated high school, I took a trip to Germany with the Bartlett High School German Club. While there, I was browsing through a music store and stumbled across a band that sounded interesting -- Poems for Laila.
    • The Complete Chronicles of Narnia Well, I just finished all seven books of Narnia. I hadn't read these in many, many years, and at some point C.S. Lewis decided that he'd rather have the books presented in their chronological order rather than the order they were written in, so it was in many ways an almost entirely new experience for me.

On This Day: May 11

Since I’ll hit 20 years of blogging this November, this year I’m posting a daily list of anything I published on this day in the past.

There are 21 posts previously published on May 11th

  • 2023
  • 2020
  • 2017
    • Got my new and improved #glif from @studioneat today! (Handy-dandy phone stand/holder/tripod mount for photo/videography.)
  • 2016
    • Book twenty of 2016: Anatomy of Melancholy, by Joey Comeau and Emily Horne. 🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟 (132/366)
  • 2014
    • We didn’t have time for our usual pre-show treat last night, so we’re making up for that this afternoon.
  • 2011
  • 2009
    • Spockstradamus So, with a little digging around on Memory Alpha, I present a (likely _very_ incomplete) list of things that Spock Prime _could_ warn the Federation about, as they should still exist to pose future threats to the Federation.
    • Thoughts on Star Trek In the many long months leading up to the release of the film, I'd wanted it to be good, I'd hoped it would be good, and as we got closer, the many outstanding reviews gave me hope -- and for once, I wasn't let down.
  • 2008
    • Justification (and oh yeah, Happy Mother’s Day) See? My year-after-year failure to do anything big for Mother's Day wasn't being inconsiderate, absentminded or forgetful -- I was just respecting the wishes of the woman who started the whole thing in the first place!
  • 2006
  • 2005
    • Finally! I got home after work, popped in the disk, and hit the fateful "Erase and Install" button. A few minutes later (probably about 15 or so...I didn't time it, but it went faster than I expected) I was prompted to reboot, and Tiger was up and running.
  • 2004
    • A visual I didn’t need… While I'm sure that a benefit run to support the Seattle Animal Shelter is a very good cause, when we're living in an era with some rather well-known odd kinks, maybe naming it the "Furry 5K" wasn't the best choice in the world…
    • U-District Street Fair This could be an entertaining way to spend some time this weekend — the annual U-District Street Fair.
    • Google bits: redactions and spam I got a piece of comment spam earlier that, when I looked at it, made me laugh, simply because in an effort to make it look almost like a real comment, the spammer had mixed links in with a paragraph of real text. It just so happens that the paragraph they chose was one from Google's website, discussing how pages are indexed after being submitted to Google.
    • Manly Pink #1 Mere hours after I put up my silly little challenge, Matt responded with a ready-to-go stylesheet that's very pink!
    • We need pink! Manly pink! Anybody want to redesign my site for me? It's gonna need pink. Lots of pink. And big, hard, nippleless breasts.
  • 2003
    • Mayday! My life, May 10th, 2003 Here we are — one day of my life, my entry into the Mayday Project.
    • Mayday preparations Had a good day wandering around Seattle yesterday taking pictures for the Mayday Project. Unfortunately, putting pictures up is currently on hold, as Rick accidentally walked off with my camera when he left the Vogue last night.
  • 2002
    • Why blog? Some days I sit back and wonder just why I do this. My site doesn't get a whole lot of traffic -- primarily just my folks and a few friends who stop by from time to time when they remember.
    • Ack Oops -- I just upgraded my blog software to the newest version, and in the process nuked the hack I had that inserted smileys into posts.
    • Spider-Man I told you I'd get around to this. ;) In brief -- it rocked. There are a select few movies that were a successful translation from the comic book medium to the silver screen, and Spider-Man just rocketed straight to the top of that list.

Difficult Listening Hour 2020.05.09

Week thirteen of my unplanned, unrehearsed, seat-of-the-pants goofing around. As a way of getting back into practice and doing something regularly, I’ve started doing regular Twitch broadcasts, now on Saturday mid-mornings. These are the results. Anything goes.

Read more

On This Day: May 10

Since I’ll hit 20 years of blogging this November, this year I’m posting a daily list of anything I published on this day in the past.

There are 16 posts previously published on May 10th

  • 2023
  • 2021
    • The Basement is Back If you're ever tempted, I do _not_ recommend chopping out 1/3 of your living space for three months in the midst of a pandemic when you're not leaving the house. Just so's you know.
  • 2020
  • 2017
    • Book twenty-nine of 2017: Back to the Future, by George Gipe. 🌟🌟
  • 2016
    • Kilroy was here. (131/366)
  • 2014
    • Out to see Les Mis. My second time seeing this on stage; the first was the touring company when they came to Anchorage many years ago. Quite impressed that CWU is doing this.
  • 2011
  • 2007
  • 2004
    • Seattle’s first female cab drivers There's a very cool article about WWII-era Seattle in the P-I today, when about thirty women were 'drafted' into becoming cab drivers when many of the city's men went off to fight for their country. One of those many little tidbits of history that tend to fascinate me.
    • Dull isn’t always bad Look: a gift that doesn't annoy or make noise or anything! How dull. Mom.
    • Kilts, not skirts! Actor Brad Pitt said Sunday that fashion-conscious men may be wearing Greek-style skirts soon after his big-budget film about the Trojan War opens this week.
    • Kill Bill Prairie and I watched Kill Bill this weekend — the whole thing, renting Volume One Saturday night and going out to see Volume Two on Sunday. I've got to say that I think that Kill Bill is easily the best work I've seen from Quentin Tarrantino.
  • 2003
    • The family walk The other day at work, I'd wandered up to the 7-11 up the block to grab something more than what our vending machines can offer us for food. On the way back, I passed a family walking down the street that had two of the cutest kids, and so I grabbed a quick picture for the site.
  • 2001
    • Sister Machine Gun ‘This Metal Sky’ They are mechanical, maniacal, derived, you couldn't drown in their gene pool if you tried, but they're all made up in brilliant disguise selling the very thing they most want but cannot possess -- you.

On This Day: May 9

Since I’ll hit 20 years of blogging this November, this year I’m posting a daily list of anything I published on this day in the past.

There are 22 posts previously published on May 9th

  • 2023
    • Year 50 Day 7 It's nice to finally have the kind of weather that really lets me appreciate the balcony outside my office at work.
    • 📚 Cast No Shadow by James Swallow Does a good job of fleshing out Valeris and exploring the motivations and rationale behind her actions.
  • 2022
  • 2021
    • Difficult Listening Hour 2021.05.08 Unrehearsed, seat-of-the-pants, let's-see-what-happens mixing. You never know what might fall into one of these!
    • 📚 18/2021: _Shadows on the Sun_ by Michael Jan Friedman ⭐️⭐️ #startrek 🖖 Didn’t really care for a McCoy still blindly obsessed over his ex after decades, or the markedly somber tone of the crew’s return to Earth following the events of STVI:TUC. Very much a downer of a story.
  • 2020
    • On This Day: May 9 Recognizing 20 years of blogging, here are my past posts from May 9
    • The real Lord of the Flies: what happened when six boys were shipwrecked for 15 months: When a group of schoolboys were marooned on an island in 1965, it turned out very differently from William Golding’s bestseller, writes Rutger Bregman.
  • 2018
    • Best comment I’ve seen yet on Ollie North becoming the head of the NRA: “Russian-backed terror group selects noted international arms smuggler as its new President”.
  • 2016
    • Book nineteen of 2016: Tinseltown, by William J. Mann. 🌟🌟🌟 (130/366)
  • 2015
    • The pre-show froyo is a very important tradition.
    • First time at Rodeo City BBQ for our weekly date night. Quite amused by my boot mug.
  • 2014
    • This has been a week for kicking ass, and I was on the wrong side of that equation. Very glad it’s Friday and the weekend has very little planned.
  • 2005
    • UPS, they did it again! Because I'm paranoid after all the issues I've been having so far, I just logged into UPS's tracking site to check on the current state of my shipment. What. The. Fuck?!?
    • Why ‘UPS’ is pronounced ‘Oops!’ All in all, an incredibly frustrating experience. A mysterious 9:10pm call on Friday to hold the package for pickup that I didn't make, and some twit this morning who didn't tell me what was actually happening.
    • Clutter But...nothing I or my family has ever managed to come up with even comes close to comparing to this house. Amazing...and a little disturbing.
  • 2004
  • 2003
    • NORAD? Um, nope! Looking at another page on the site, a more straightforward timeline of Sept. 11th, imagine my surprise when I saw a picture captioned 'Norad's war room in Cheyenne, Wyoming,' that, rather than being a picture of the Norad control room, is actually a screen shot from the 1983 adventure/suspense film Wargames!
    • Two Dave Winer grumbles I don't have as many issues with Dave Winer as many other people seem to, but he does occasionally come up with something that I'm tempted to comment on. Today, I gave into the temptation…
    • I'm (still) Gambit Through physical contact, Gambit can charge inanimate objects with kinetic energy, which is released on contact with explosive results. Gambit also has slightly enhanced agility and speed.
  • 2001
    • Ugh…now what? Dammit -- no matter how well things are going, something always seems to come along to trip things up.
    • TV time…kinda As always, there have been a couple additions to my movie collection over the past few days. Rather than actual movies, though, I'm catching up on some of the watchable shows that I miss due to the fact that I don't watch television.
    • Told ya I’d get more in here Anyway, so that's it for the past few days. Nothing too earth shattering, but there's very little of that in my life these days anyway. Right now it's mostly a matter of counting the days until I visit Fairbanks in a couple weeks (weekend of May 18th), and until I finally leave this state to see how things are living in the lower 48 (sometime in mid-August). Can't happen soon enough for me.

On This Day: May 8

Since I’ll hit 20 years of blogging this November, this year I’m posting a daily list of anything I published on this day in the past.

There are 25 posts previously published on May 8th

  • 2023
    • Year 50 Day 6 Getting a full night's sleep helped. As did not having to file a police incident report.
  • 2022
    • 🎥 The Green Knight It’s been a long time since I reached the end of a movie and just wanted to sit for a few minutes to let it sink in.
    • 🎥 Scream A very fun and enjoyable “requel” (reboot + sequel) of the Scream franchise.
  • 2020
  • 2019
    • Science Fiction/Fantasy readers, writers, and editors: Which do you consider to be the top SF/F awards? Mike Glyer of File 770 would like to know and is running a poll; you can vote for up to six. My (unordered) picks: Hugo, Locus, Nebula, PK Dick, World Fantasy, Bram Stoker. 5/13/19 Update: Here’s the results.
    • It seems it came out a few months ago, but I just found out that Affinity Designer, Serif’s alternative to Adobe InDesign, is now in free beta status. I’m already a fan of Affinity Photo and Designer (alternatives to Photoshop and Illlustrator), so this is a nice find.
  • 2018
    • Nice! Making it ever easier to vote is a good, good thing. “The King County Council today approved a measure to offer prepaid postage on ballots for this year’s primary and general elections.”
  • 2016
    • Warp speed, helm! And someone find out what happened to my uniform. (129/366)
    • As long as we had to go back to the store, we couldn’t resist trying another six Lego Disney figures…and got no duplicates! Ariel, Genie, Daisy, Ursula, Syndrome, and Alice!
    • Our local Fred Meyers finally put out the current Disney Lego blind bags! We got Mickey, Minnie, Stitch, Hook, and Maleficent — not bad for our first batch!
  • 2014
    • For #throwbackthursday, me in 1993. No clue what I was heading out to, but I’m all decked out in full tux and top hat, with black-and-white polka dot bow tie and cummerbund. Snazzy! No explanation for the wall blanket, goofy expression, or weird claw hand.
  • 2007
    • Press the Little Doohickey This weekend, we got Prairie her own camera, a Pentax Optio M20. It's perfect for her -- a cute, compact little point and shoot that takes pictures of what she points it at.
  • 2006
    • Hairy Tulips A form of tulip...I think. I'm not really sure.
    • Dangerous Playgrounds Still Exist! A jungle gym with lots of climbing bits, ropes, and various ways to clamber around on (and fall off of) it, including a marvelous slide with no rails that tips to one side. A...spinny thing...that had me so dizzy I could barely stand up. It was marvelous!
    • NyQuil Jello? One dessert trick Prairie and I have been playing with for the past few months is using soda instead of water to make Jello. Different combinations of flavors are possible, and the carbonation makes the Jello 'fizz' on your tongue when you eat it.
    • Wind Vane Sculpture, Corvallis, OR A sculpture in Corvallis, OR.
  • 2005
  • 2004
    • Semacode Here's a fun little tech toy that I discovered thanks to Jonas: Semacode, a two-dimensional barcode that encodes a URL in the matrix. With the newer breed of camera phones and the right software installed, the phone can read the barcode and automatically open the URL in the camera's embedded web browser.
    • It’s not just Abu Ghraib Don't understand how conditions in Abu Ghraib could have gotten as bad as they did? Maybe it's time to take a closer look at our own prison systems.
  • 2003
    • Effects of Bush's tax cut I'm having problems diving back into political areas at the moment, but this chart is well worth looking at.
    • My Netflix queue After severely decimating my movie collection, I got to talking with one of the guys at work, and he gave Netflix a glowing recommendation. So, I figured what the heck, and signed up. If anyone's really morbidly curious, I'll keep track of what's in my queue here. Feel free to suggest some, too!
    • You all rock! I just wanted to say to Erik, Kirsten, Prairie, Dad, Tim, and Sharon how much I'm enjoying the back-and-forth of the last few days regarding evolution, social standing, and everything else. This is a blast, and a fun way to kick my brain into gear! You all rock.
  • 2002
    • Ugh In brief -- I saw Spiderman, it rocked. More later. I'm currently battling off a really nasty flu bug...hence why not updates for a few days, and only this really short note right now before I curl up in bed.

On This Day: May 7

Since I’ll hit 20 years of blogging this November, this year I’m posting a daily list of anything I published on this day in the past.

There are 23 posts previously published on May 7th

  • 2024
  • 2023
  • 2022
  • 2020
  • 2018
    • Linkdump for May 3rd through May 7th An automatically generated list of links that caught my eye between May 3rd and May 7th. • Connecticut OKs Bill Pledging Electoral Votes To National Popular-Vote Winner • The original iMac: 20 years since Apple changed its fate • One space between each sentence, they said. Science just proved them wrong. • ‘Who Gets to Be Sexy?’ • Swedish Meatballs Are Turkish? ‘My Whole Life Has Been a Lie’
  • 2017
    • Book twenty-eight of 2017: Visitor, by C. J. Cherryh. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
  • 2016
    • Birthday weekend date night number two: an unexpectedly underwhelming dinner, on which we bailed before dessert came in favor of our traditional pre-theater frozen yogurt, to be followed by seeing CWU’s production of the Mary Poppins stage musical. Mmmm, yogurt! (128/366)
  • 2015
    • Behold! I have infinite (ever smaller) watches! Just Apple Watches all the way down.
    • Okay – being able to use my watch as a remote for my iPhone’s camera (it even displays what the phone is seeing on the watch screen) is really cool.
    • Up and running! I’ll play with it more after lunch. :)
    • Working through the setup process.
    • Well, so far so good. It’s comfortable, at least. Now to turn it on….
    • Well, now, isn’t that pretty?
    • Inside the box is…another box!
    • My “big” birthday present is here!
  • 2014
    • Doing my nightly workout on the elliptical. A little bit every day!
  • 2009
  • 2008
    • Birthday Presents! A couple of birthday presents showed up in the mail today. Cool! Thanks to Phil for Mark Twain's Roughing It and to Fernando for the sci-fi anthology The Starry Rift!
  • 2006
    • Camera Vision Camera vision is like that, you stop thinking about the shot and just take it. And as it was once said to me, I now say say it to you. You have Camera vision. And it shows.
  • 2005
    • 5 / 7 / 5 Five, seven, and five: / syllables and today's date. / Post on Haiku Day!
  • 2004
    • The Worm Within You discover that you're the host of a sixteen foot tapeworm one day when half of it comes out. What do you do?
  • 2003
    • Darwin Has Left the Building At this point, I amend, but stand by, my original premise that through medical science and societal standards, we as a race have removed ourselves from the premise of Natural Selection. It is no longer the most fit — those with the best combination of all desirable traits, including, but not limited to, intelligence — who are more likely to propagate. Rather, it is those that either best fit a societal norm that is far below what it should be (in my not-so-humble opinion), or those that simply continue to have children, no matter how ill-advised it may be to do so.
    • Sumo wrestlers and rattlesnakes The sheer ponderousness of the panel's opinion — the mountain of verbiage it must deploy to explain away these fourteen short words of constitutional text — refutes its thesis far more convincingly than anything I might say. The panel's labored effort to smother the Second Amendment by sheer body weight has all the grace of a sumo wrestler trying to kill a rattlesnake by sitting on it — and is just as likely to succeed.

📚 twenty-two of 2020: Nothing Lasts Forever by Roderick Thorp ⭐️⭐️⭐️

On its own, a fairly standard action thriller. But as the source material for Die Hard, it’s a fascinating artifact. Surprisingly similar, and all changes made for the film were for the better.

On This Day: May 6

Since I’ll hit 20 years of blogging this November, this year I’m posting a daily list of anything I published on this day in the past.

There are 25 posts previously published on May 6th

  • 2023
  • 2022
    • Modern Star Trek Needs More Technobabble Okay, fine. Because absolutely nobody asked for yet another Star Trek hot take from some random nobody on the internet, here we go. This is the stuff that I don't like about modern Trek.
  • 2020
    • 📚 twenty-two of 2020: Nothing Lasts Forever by Roderick Thorp ⭐️⭐️⭐️ On its own, a fairly standard action thriller. But as the source material for Die Hard, it’s a fascinating artifact. Surprisingly similar, and all changes made for the film were for the better.
    • On This Day: May 6 Recognizing 20 years of blogging, here are my past posts from May 6
  • 2018
    • Sorry, Mr. Spider, but the ceiling directly above my bed is not an acceptable spot to hang out, and you will be evicted post-haste.
  • 2016
    • Birthday weekend date night number one: dinner, dessert, and a CWU vocal jazz concert. (127/366)
  • 2014
    • Not a bad day, not a great day. Not disappointed to be relaxing in bed (yes, at 8:30…my inner twenty-something is quite ashamed).
  • 2006
    • Who is John Galt? I'm not entirely sure about this one -- Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie will be starring in a film version of _Atlas Shrugged_.
  • 2005
    • QuickTime 7 HD Just for grins and giggles, I decided to download all the different Serenity trailers available to compare them. I grabbed all four 'normal' versions from the Serenity trailer page, the two HD versions from the Serenity HD page, opened them all up at once, and took a peek.
    • Jonesing for Tiger Anybody in Seattle feel like letting me borrow their Tiger install disc until Monday when mine gets here? ;)
    • You won’t succeed on Broadway if you don’t have any Jews! I spent most of the first part of my morning in tears today -- because I couldn't stop laughing. Last night I noticed that the iTunes Music Store had the Broadway cast soundtrack to Spamalot. Of course, that was a no-brainer impulse buy.
    • Microsoft reconsiders, supports anti-discrimination laws Via Scoble, Ballmer's e-mail announcing Microsoft's re-committing to support anti-discrimination legislation covering sexual orientation.
    • Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy For my part, I had a blast. It wasn't perfect, but I thought it was _quite_ enjoyable, and a reasonably good attempt at putting Douglas Adams' particular brand of absurdity on screen.
  • 2004
    • This is just goofy I'd be pissed if it weren't so damn funny. That's just goofy, though — because I have a DVD drive, I have to install iLife from the DVD? The install CD is entirely useless to me? Honestly, that's one of the most bizarre things I've seen from Apple to date.
    • We need a Japanese president Case in point: a Japanese minister has resigned in disgrace after failing to pay into a national pension plan.
    • Why isn’t Limbaugh muzzled yet? I could hardly see straight when I first read that, let alone come close to forming a coherent response. Thankfully, Kirsten did much better than I…
    • National Day of Prayer So apparently today was the National Day of Prayer. I'm sure that was appreciated by those Americans who are Muslim, Jewish, Buddhist, Mormon, pagan, agnostic, or atheistic.
    • State votes ranked by IQ Here's a fun chart: States ranked by average IQ and how they voted in 2000.
    • Seattle Skyline Not the best quality panorama in the world, but not terribly bad, considering it was taken while bobbing along on the waters of Lake Union in a Duck.
    • Countering the ‘rains all the time argument’… Looks like Washington might be facing another drought this summer.
  • 2003
    • Cynicism Reigns Supreme My personal 'sometimes more serious than others, depending on how many momos I had to deal with today' opinion is that, quite simply, we (i.e., the human race) are breeding ourselves into oblivion by breeding for stupidity.
    • Well, of course! For my opinion…see a future post in the metaphysics category.
    • Peace is our profession Operation Strangelove: On May 14th, host a screening (even if it's just for yourself!) of Dr Strangelove (or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb)!
    • iTunes Man Sell us a song, you're the iTunes man, / Sell us a song tonight. / Well, we're all in the mood for a melody, / And you've got the pricing just right.
  • 2002