long comments come unsurprisingly, neh?; i mimic claire in the first point, obviouslypoesianJune 5 2007, 22:32:42 UTC
A You're gay B That insane-by-proxy feeling is fantastic; I get it rather easily I'm afraid. C Hope the paper-adventures went well. D I get angsty when I go for a long time without painting = emo-boy (further proof in the fact that I know what you mean
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Re: long comments come unsurprisingly, neh?; i mimic claire in the first point, obviouslypoesianJune 6 2007, 22:53:25 UTC
(D) Painting/self-expression = emo. Totally.
(E) Dialogue vs. conversation. Go.
(F) Oh no! I would like to see. I listed to a show of This American Life today, and I can totally see why one might dislike it, although I didn't. I wasn't fascinated by it, either, though. But I think that was more due to subject choice than anything else. Uggh Garrison Keillor.
(G) They raise cattle.
(I) Hah.
(J) I forgot we weren't friends. But thanks, now we are! I don't remember... Hmmm, body modification of all sorts is big in all strange sorts of places. Penn and Teller (on HBO?) do a show about circumcision and they interview a guy who advocates 'growing back' foreskins, and has done so to himself, using weights and all sorts of uncomfortable-and-not-worth-it-sounding techniques. Weird. That's the extent of the story, I think.
Re: long comments come unsurprisingly, neh?; i mimic claire in the first point, obviouslyfrontdispatchesJune 6 2007, 23:58:55 UTC
d) self-expression is emo? yep, i see it - hemingway singing along to dashboard confessional. in other words, either we have differing definitions of emo, or you're just retarded. (i like keeping my options open.)
e) in my mind, in the context of what i wrote - dialogue is shorter than conversation, and more utalitarian in its functions (A: 'what time should i be there' / B: 'six' / A: 'ok, see you then' / B: 'Quite').
d) told you. they try hard, but save for the sporadic episode featuring david sedaris, it's pretty damned boring - it's like they purposely seek out the most monotone people to speak on-air, too.
B That insane-by-proxy feeling is fantastic; I get it rather easily I'm afraid.
C Hope the paper-adventures went well.
D I get angsty when I go for a long time without painting = emo-boy (further proof in the fact that I know what you mean ( ... )
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(E) Dialogue vs. conversation. Go.
(F) Oh no! I would like to see. I listed to a show of This American Life today, and I can totally see why one might dislike it, although I didn't. I wasn't fascinated by it, either, though. But I think that was more due to subject choice than anything else. Uggh Garrison Keillor.
(G) They raise cattle.
(I) Hah.
(J) I forgot we weren't friends. But thanks, now we are! I don't remember... Hmmm, body modification of all sorts is big in all strange sorts of places. Penn and Teller (on HBO?) do a show about circumcision and they interview a guy who advocates 'growing back' foreskins, and has done so to himself, using weights and all sorts of uncomfortable-and-not-worth-it-sounding techniques. Weird. That's the extent of the story, I think.
(L) 43-year-old man.
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e) in my mind, in the context of what i wrote - dialogue is shorter than conversation, and more utalitarian in its functions (A: 'what time should i be there' / B: 'six' / A: 'ok, see you then' / B: 'Quite').
d) told you. they try hard, but save for the sporadic episode featuring david sedaris, it's pretty damned boring - it's like they purposely seek out the most monotone people to speak on-air, too.
g) not quite cows:
i) yes ( ... )
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