While I was looking for my next snark, I was surprised to find that this one had only been tackled once, and not since 2008. I guess we just don’t ❤ NYC like Ann. Plus, I had some artsy lolcats leftover from Rosie, and honestly, I didn't feel up to fifteen chapters of any particular sitter without inspiration.
Anyway, my impressions before
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At least she's lacking the usual half up ponytail with a super sized scrunchie. I HATED THAT LOOK.
(Oh, man, I suddenly desperately want some kind of Greek mythology/BSC fusion fic. At least then you can blame logic and continuity gaps on “a god did it.”)
WANT WANT WANT.
I despise departure scenes in the series when its only for a short trip. Like these parent ever spend any time with their children anyway. How will these two weeks be any different?
Stacey, Claud, and Dawn will stay there, while everyone else stays at the Dakota with Laine
I know Stacey wants to stay with her dad, but it would be kind of sucky to stay in his tiny apartment when you could be staying at the swanky Dakota, at least for Dawn and Claudia.
I know they aren't spelled the same, but in my head Alistaire is Aleister Crowley. I dont even think they are prononced the same, but its just one of those things that ran thru my head and now I can't change it. Also, Mrs. Harrington is Victoria Beckham in my head.
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The second time is Jessi, saying she "grabbed her pocketbook" and ran to catch up with Stacey etc, and that's when it leaped out at me as a weird word choice for early-90s, Northeast teens/tweens.
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And LOL at Mary Anne looking out for her pocketbook instead of her stepsister during a suspected mugging.
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I seriously did LOL at that. "That is, at your hilarious description of that.
"My husband (who's from a small town in rural Missouri) says it means "wallet," even a man's wallet, around there.
I'd never think of a man's wallet when hearing pocketbook, that to me would always be a woman's purse. Not that I say piocketbook. I say purse or, much less often, handbag.
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It's an old term, I think -- Pa in the Little House books had a "pocket book" (two words) that from context seemed to mean wallet.
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