Entry tags:
Misc.
Have spent the best part of the evening geeking out with Miss M. Have introduced her to March Madness (<-prelims), which she thought was an AMAZING idea, and then we found the BEST EVER SOKKA. His FAAAAAAAAACE! (Bonus ADORABLE Aang.)
Also I have finally worked out that Dreamwidth is Welwyn_Garden_City. This is both its strength and the reason I can't take to it. I love my neighbourhood where I've been for years (my first home!), nevermind the fact that for every step forwards, the infrastructure also takes a step back, and that the architecture is going downhill and that the public transport is expensive and rubbish. I'm obvoiusly going to end up like one of those people in a tiny house between two skyscrapers. And people will say 'Come to Welwyn Garden City, it's so nice!' and I'll say that I'm getting used to the crime. Plus, the inner city is more interesting, and it's where all my friends live... (I'll still moan about all the issues, mind you. But then I live in England, so that's just a normal part of life. Most things are rubbish, but we're used to that. Besides, it's OLD and it's OURS.)
Cue Buffy 'verse example:
I shall copy a bit of 'Buffy Summer's Diary' ("Older and Far Away" in diary form, if Buffy actually sounded like Bridget Jones.) The relevant part:
DW is Normal Richard.
LJ is Spike.
I know he's bad for me, but... I have feelings for him. He's been around for a long time, and I do believe that he might turn out good in the end. I have no feelings for tapioca pudding. There is probably more to tapioca pudding than I'm giving it credit for, but...
(Please don't point out that LJ is now run by Corporate Evil. I'll throw W&H at you. Mmmm, Lilah.)
You know, I don't think I've ever used my 'quixotic' mood before. But for once it feels relevant. Oh LJ...
Also I have finally worked out that Dreamwidth is Welwyn_Garden_City. This is both its strength and the reason I can't take to it. I love my neighbourhood where I've been for years (my first home!), nevermind the fact that for every step forwards, the infrastructure also takes a step back, and that the architecture is going downhill and that the public transport is expensive and rubbish. I'm obvoiusly going to end up like one of those people in a tiny house between two skyscrapers. And people will say 'Come to Welwyn Garden City, it's so nice!' and I'll say that I'm getting used to the crime. Plus, the inner city is more interesting, and it's where all my friends live... (I'll still moan about all the issues, mind you. But then I live in England, so that's just a normal part of life. Most things are rubbish, but we're used to that. Besides, it's OLD and it's OURS.)
Cue Buffy 'verse example:
I shall copy a bit of 'Buffy Summer's Diary' ("Older and Far Away" in diary form, if Buffy actually sounded like Bridget Jones.) The relevant part:
Immediately Xander and Anya revealed they had set me up with some Xander-friend. Gah! Had they never heard of self-sufficient woman of substance not needing men?
[...]
Was about to be Good Friend and inquire further about the status of her heartbreak, when Vile Spike appeared at the back door, beer under his arm and wrinkly demon Clem in tow. He looked so...Spike, all panthery and lean and v. dangerous and sexy. He was behaving like a regular guy, however, which I found desperately unfair, making it almost impossible to toss him out into the night like he deserved.
I didn't even get to try, either, because Xander brought in Normal Richard at that point. I had to go figure out parking, Xander becoming an immediate incompetent for the sake of his ploy. Normal Richard pleasant and rather beige, like tapioca pudding or similar.
DW is Normal Richard.
LJ is Spike.
I know he's bad for me, but... I have feelings for him. He's been around for a long time, and I do believe that he might turn out good in the end. I have no feelings for tapioca pudding. There is probably more to tapioca pudding than I'm giving it credit for, but...
(Please don't point out that LJ is now run by Corporate Evil. I'll throw W&H at you. Mmmm, Lilah.)
You know, I don't think I've ever used my 'quixotic' mood before. But for once it feels relevant. Oh LJ...

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*SQUISHES YOU*
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When I was a kid they were! Tapioca pudding makes me...uneasy *cackles*
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I don't know, as I don't know what tapioca pudding IS. Except for being pleasant and beige. *googles* Ooooh, it is apparently Britain's most hated school dinner, nicknamed "frogspawn". So you weren't far off - except the texture is offputting, rather than alluring to kids.
Well, forget tapioca and concentrate on Welwyn Garden City...
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Don't listen to anyone about tapioca pudding--it is the best. Mellow and comforting and yet not unlike eating frog eyeballs.
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I grew up with the books, so I know what you mean. :)
At any rate, there is a part of me that would quite like to build a cabin sometime, and she is mildly appeased by this Dreamwidth thing.
Well there's been many... journalfen, greatestjournal, insanejournal (that's been around since 2001!) - it's hard to see DW as anything other than just another LJ clone. It's nicer than the others, it's true, and it's doing well since LJ has decided to be a jerk, but who knows where it'll end up? LJ was just as egalitarian as DW back in the day... (/cynical)
It's hard to get over the feeling of just being a squatter.
Guess that's the difference. To me it's home. DW is... a cottage in the country. I set up one of those already (my IJ account is from 2007 - 2 years older than DW itself) so yeah... pleasant holiday cottage. But those are two a penny. My LJ is priceless. (See? Emotional attachment through the roof.)
Don't listen to anyone about tapioca pudding--it is the best. Mellow and comforting and yet not unlike eating frog eyeballs.
I'll take your word for it. (I asked Darcy and he pulled a face. Clearly he was also traumatised by school dinners...)
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And I'm finally watching season 7 of Doctor Who while I'm on the elliptical at the gym, and I get so engrossed that I completely forget I'm exercising and it stops feeling like work.
And I think I've finally worn down my parents enough to get them to watch DW. My dad is worried it will become an addiction and they'll arrange their lives around watching, which is what they did when they saw Battlestar Galactica.
How is your family?
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*beams* (People keep trying to entice me to switch to DW because it's 'nice' and I've been trying to work out why this argument just doesn't work...)
And I'm finally watching season 7 of Doctor Who while I'm on the elliptical at the gym, and I get so engrossed that I completely forget I'm exercising and it stops feeling like work.
\o/ \o/ \o/ And you'll be caught up in time for the second half to start. You're very smart. (They're such good episodes! They went all out for 'big standalones' and it really worked!) Also OSWIN! <3 <3 <3 <3 <3
And I think I've finally worn down my parents enough to get them to watch DW. My dad is worried it will become an addiction and they'll arrange their lives around watching, which is what they did when they saw Battlestar Galactica.
Your parents sound awesome. And good luck - you have mentioned that this is a show that's turning 50, so they can play catch-up for years, y/y? ;)
How is your family?
We're all very well. The older girls are in school all day, as they're practicising for the musical which they're finally performing next week, so it'll be just me, Darcy and the Cherub for most of the day. Which will be nice. :)
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With time. And people coming in and making it real, and developing neighborhoods, and giving it quirks. All cities need to really live is time and people - and all of a sudden, they're breathing and sighing and crying and snarling and loving and being far more interesting than one would have thought when all the earnest city planners were going on about bingo nights and garden walks.
If the people don't come and work with the city, the poor thing can't live, can't be rescued from the city planners.
And even then, it's amazing the kind of shadows that even the most well-designed boxy house can throw at sunset.
I notice a divergence in the analogies and similes and such that we use. You tend to compare LJ and DW to a person, while I tend to compare it to a place where people can be. I'm not sure if that points to a difference or not. Hmmm. My, it's good to think about, though!
Anyhow, the point for me is that places need people to become interesting. If they don't have people, the poor things won't ever become more interesting. (And here I see I'm turning my "place" analogy into a "person" analogy. Thus, the curse of the animist raises its head again. Heh.)
Also? Tapioca, as I mentioned to
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Oh the people thing was just for fun - and to help explain my emotional attachment. Overall I very much see LJ as a town. LJs are houses, and you compose your own street by friending people.
All cities need to really live is time and people - and all of a sudden, they're breathing and sighing and crying and snarling and loving and being far more interesting than one would have thought when all the earnest city planners were going on about bingo nights and garden walks.
I definitely get your point. I just... don't want to move. I don't mind going across to the new town, but the sheer amount of work that's gone into my house is not something that can be transferred. Even if LJ does in time become completely unusable, DW will only ever be a copy. A nicer copy than the original, but a copy nonetheless. (Although it must be said that DW is very, very young. LJ at a similar point in time was small, friendly, had no ads and had just gone past the stage where you needed an invite code. DW might very well go down the LJ route... /cynical)
Anyway,
(I have no idea if any of this makes sense btw. My head is in a funny place.)
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Anyway,
Perhaps she's right (although in my case, since I'm a Canadian who moved to the US because of an unstoppable impulse to be closer to the friends I'd met through science fiction fandom, I'd suggest that perhaps it's a Western Hemisphere thing. Heh.)
And I love that icon. Because the Brigadier wins at everything.
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Same here. :)
Perhaps she's right (although in my case, since I'm a Canadian who moved to the US because of an unstoppable impulse to be closer to the friends I'd met through science fiction fandom, I'd suggest that perhaps it's a Western Hemisphere thing. Heh.)
I'm descended from Vikings (born Danish, specifically). And now live in England. So... I dunno. I'm just comfortable with everything being a thousand years old? (Actually, someone observed that the US vs. UK split in worldview is very neatly illustrated in their main sci fi shows - wagon train to the stars (Star Trek) vs. scion of Empire travels through the universe (Doctor Who). There's definitely something there.
And I love that icon. Because the Brigadier wins at everything.
And so does his daughter. :)