Actor Nicholas Brendon has passed away. He is most famous for playing Xander on Buffy the Vampire Slayer, but also appeared on Criminal Minds and Private Practice.
This is something I’ve always wondered . Forgive me if it’s explained in one of the films and I missed it but I don’t think it has Does Death give them the premonition to toy with them.
I feel like it's such a well known franchise, yet I've never met anyone who would call themselves a The Purge fan, even though it seems like people like them enough to keep making movies, right?
We were very tired, we were very merry— We had gone back and forth all night on the ferry. It was bare and bright, and smelled like a stable— But we looked into a fire, we leaned across a table, We lay on a hill-top underneath the moon; And the whistles kept blowing, and the dawn came soon.
We were very tired, we were very merry— We had gone back and forth all night on the ferry; And you ate an apple, and I ate a pear, From a dozen of each we had bought somewhere; And the sky went wan, and the wind came cold, And the sun rose dripping, a bucketful of gold.
We were very tired, we were very merry, We had gone back and forth all night on the ferry. We hailed, “Good morrow, mother!” to a shawl-covered head, And bought a morning paper, which neither of us read; And she wept, “God bless you!” for the apples and pears, And we gave her all our money but our subway fares.
It's mild and sunny today, although it was cloudy and threatening to rain this morning while I was out running. I think it's in the mid 50s/mid teens. I went for a run at parkrun time even though there are no parkruns here, and I liked knowing that I was running while people were doing parkrun. I'm not a fan of DST and one of the things I don't like about it is that the mornings stay cold until later at this time of year than they would on standard time, and then it gets warm in the afternoons. I much prefer to get my exercise in the morning, so I have to put up with the cold.
Miuras will always be cool, but this particular Miura comes with more than a hint of rock star about it. Rumor has it, it's a musician in its own right.
I talk with my hands. This amuses A. to no end: She's the one who's part-Italian and yet I'm the one who can't talk without gesticulating. Whether I'm talking about sending an email (fingers typing on a keyboard), sending a fax (hands palm-down, fingertips guiding the paper into the machine), or chopping vegetables (left hand moving the knife up and down, right hand advancing the the vegetable toward it), I don't even think about it, but my hands accompany my words.
Yesterday, we got some small cucumbers and I was talking about using some of them to make oi muchim (a Korean cucumber salad with thinly sliced cucumbers in a gochugaru-seasoned dressing). I was talking about slicing the cucumbers, and she looked at my hands and asked "What's that?" I looked at my hands and saw that my right hand was flat, palm-up, while my left hand was palm-down, in a claw grip, moving back and forth over my right hand. And then it hit me: When I make oi muchim, I don't slice the cucumbers with a knife. I slice them with a mandoline. And without even thinking about it, my hands were doing to the correct motion for the action I would be doing.
I don't even notice that I'm doing this until she points it out, so I don't know if I could stop it if I tried.
Thank you so much for making something for me! I have some overall likes and DNWs below, and then some fandom-specific ideas and things I like about the canon and characters. Please only consider all this as potential suggestions put out there in case you find them useful, though, and write/make whatever best calls to you. So long as it avoids my DNWs I am sure I will be happy; I love seeing other people's takes on characters and relationships I like and don't require them to follow my own ideas or headcanons. Treats always welcome! Shortcut links within this letter: General: likes; NSFW likes; DNWs; opt-ins. Fandoms: Babylon 5; Andor; Silmarillion; LOTR; Rings of Power; Star Wars: original and prequel trilogies
Spring movie nights (indoors or out) just got a major upgrade without the major price tag. The ultra-portable NEBULA Capsule 3 mini-projector is 25% off, down from $529.99 to $399.99, making this 1080p, Netflix-licensed mini projector a much more affordable way to turn any wall into a big screen. With March Madness, NHL and NBA […]
It's good to see a creator of his caliber doing SOMETHING horror again. Nobody should overlook comics as a medium for making good horror in when filming constraints or soured attitudes to the industry make it seem impossible.
For those of us old enough to remember the old days of video rental stores what were some of your favorite(or least favorite) horror movies that you rented based purely on the box art?
Some of the ones that come to mind immediately are:
Wraith / Hotel Hell /Slumber party massacre.
And I'd be lying if I didn't say that the entire reason I'm into the evil dead franchise is because of the box with Ash and his chainsaw arm.
So my horror question is. What is the name or thing that ghost typically do the move. Where you see the ghost across the field. Then in an instant it is across half of the field. Then its like film speed. It jumps closer and closer. Till it gets to the plot. Not alot of horror mechanics generally scare me. But that one there. It unnerves me and I dont know what it is called. Hence my question. Trying to be genuine reddit. Please dont skewer me.
I've seen two Boston Ballets in relatively quick succession over the past month, both combo programs featuring two pieces; the first was "The Rite of Spring" (Elo's, not Nijinsky's) paired with Pite's "The Seasons' Canon," and the second was a premiere, Stromile's "The Leisurely Installation of a New Window," paired with Ashton's "The [Midsummer Night's] Dream."
Breaking with the actual curation of the productions, I'm going to talk about "The Rite of Spring" and "The Leisurely Installation of a New Window" together because they both came first in their productions, they had kind of similar vibes, and I experienced similar feelings of mild disappointment about both of them that were not technically the fault of the productions. I was really excited about "The Rite of Spring" because I wanted to see some ballet dancers do a dramatic ritual sacrifice, and I was really excited about "The Leisurely Installation of a New Window" because I wanted to see some ballet dancers slowly install a window. Instead, both of these pieces were kind of abstract explorations through dance of the Relationship between the Individual and Society, and I think both would have been enjoyable for fifteen minutes but ran a bit long at half an hour.
The description for "Window" in the playbill reads:
Eighteen dancers inhabit the work through distinct but interdependent roles. The Seeker stands close to tradition, moving with discipline and clarity. The People operate within shared systems, attentive to both order and its quiet tensions. The Reformers introduce disruption, not as spectacle, but as pressure applied from within.
This did help me understand better what was going on in the dance, as the Seeker stalked around holding a book and then portentously passed it off to some dueting Reformers, but also made it feel a bit like a LARP that I was not participating in. On the other hand Reeves Gabriel of The Cure was There and Participating in Ballet Music (and every bit of marketing wanted you to know that Reeves Gabriel Of The Cure was There and Participating in Ballet Music) and occasionally the music would get very thrillingly electric guitar and you'd be like "Hello, Reeves Gabriel of The Cure!" So it's not that I didn't have a fine time, I just would have been okay with somewhat less of that time.
However, after these very mildly disappointing openers, I loved both "The Seasons' Canon" and "The Dream" very much! The Seasons' Canon is, justifiably, a known Boston Ballet showstopper -- a huge piece with a huge cast, and as you guys know I often have trouble with a piece that is not trying to tell me a story but this piece is truly just Humans Make Big Shapes and it's riveting. Could not take my eyes off it. The trailer here gives a bit of a sense but of course is not that much like seeing it Actually On Stage, but it does let you see one of the things I found most striking about the piece which is how extremely non-gendered it is -- everyone on that stage is dressed identically in pants and nude tank that makes them look topless, the whole corps looks like one and moves like one and there is nothing to distract you from that. Really, really cool experience.
And "The Dream" -- look, I'm a simple soul, and what I have discovered is that I love Ashton's silly panto-esque ballets. They are fun and they are funny and I love it when people get to be funny in dance! Dance jokes are good actually! Titania ballet-hopping her way towards Bottom in a way that manages to be simultaneously fairy-like and hilariously sultry, the arguing lovers constantly picking each other up and pirouetting a partner firmly Away from them Thank You, the rude mechanicals!! we wanted more rude mechanicals but I was so glad we got what we got. A+ Midsummer Night's Dream, would see again.