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The QC WCDT Weekly Moment of the Week Poll !

Aaaactually, I was thinking...
- 0 (0%)
Sea cucumbers and Fuzzy Clams
- 5 (5.6%)
NEVERMIND.
- 0 (0%)
"A lady always reserves the right to change her mind."
- 1 (1.1%)
NSFW! NSFW! NSFW!
- 16 (17.8%)
Run a marathon, pushups, juggle, wrestle a bear!
- 3 (3.3%)
"Are you always this hyper after sex, or am I just that good?"
- 1 (1.1%)
Operation: M.A.N.A.S.S.
- 10 (11.1%)
It's really more of a puce.
- 11 (12.2%)
Happy Arbor Day 2003!
- 13 (14.4%)
"You should've SEEN that party. It was CRAZY."
- 4 (4.4%)
He was gonna bake a cake...
- 0 (0%)
National Endowment for the Arts!
- 6 (6.7%)
I CAN STILL HEAR YOU, A$$#OLES!
- 10 (11.1%)
Daaaaaaaaaaaaannnnnngggg.
- 10 (11.1%)

Total Members Voted: 75


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Author Topic: WCDT 21-25 March 2011 (1886-1890)  (Read 98846 times)

Carl-E

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Re: WCDT 21-25 March 2011 (1886-1890)
« Reply #350 on: 25 Mar 2011, 18:12 »

Not nearly as annoyed as those of us forced to do it two weeks ago  :P

I spent 15 years in the great state of Indiana, at a time when they didn't acknowledge daylight savings.  Instead, we switched time zones - it was easier. 

The argument I remember hearing when I moved there was, "The cows need milked at dawn, no matter what time you call  it..."
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Re: WCDT 21-25 March 2011 (1886-1890)
« Reply #351 on: 25 Mar 2011, 18:26 »

Our current poll proves the old adage:

Sex sells.

EDIT: And Carl-E, that's the one thing I love about Arizona, when I go down there in the winter to visit my dad. They're not bothered with changing clocks or anything.
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Re: WCDT 21-25 March 2011 (1886-1890)
« Reply #352 on: 25 Mar 2011, 21:00 »

I live in the country of the Prime Meridian - the rest of you have got your clocks wrong.

(N.B. I will get annoyed at having to put my clock wrong next weekend - Grrr!)

Crap, I forgot I have to put all my clocks forward an hour tonight. Great!
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Re: WCDT 21-25 March 2011 (1886-1890)
« Reply #353 on: 25 Mar 2011, 22:24 »


I spent 15 years in the great state of Indiana, at a time when they didn't acknowledge daylight savings.  Instead, we switched time zones - it was easier. 


IIRC StJoseph and Elkhart counties were like that swapping between Eastern and Central. Don't remember about the rest of the Hoosier state. Gary was/is following Chicago?

But yeah, daylight saving is one of the most brain-dead ideas. Folks won't agree to wake up at 6, unless we all agree to call it 7, and also agree to mess up the railroad schedules for a day. Besides, what daylight is being saved? Is it really that important that in the summer, instead of it being light out at half ten, it stays light until half eleven??
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akronnick

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Re: WCDT 21-25 March 2011 (1886-1890)
« Reply #354 on: 26 Mar 2011, 00:15 »

http://questionablecontent.net/view.php?comic=430 ?

I'd say catching a pair of hipsters in deer-in-the-headlights paralysis is pretty lulzworthy.

Besides, not all lulz are mean.


And Carl-E, that's the one thing I love about Arizona, when I go down there in the winter to visit my dad. They're not bothered with changing clocks or anything.

I worked at an airport hotel a couple of years ago. When time change day came, all of the out of state guests who had flights to catch the next morning were so confused by the lack of the confusion!
« Last Edit: 26 Mar 2011, 00:21 by akronnick »
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Re: WCDT 21-25 March 2011 (1886-1890)
« Reply #355 on: 26 Mar 2011, 00:33 »

I live in the country of the Prime Meridian - the rest of you have got your clocks wrong.

(N.B. I will get annoyed at having to put my clock wrong next weekend - Grrr!)

and it irks right through until October doesn't it? It certainly does for me.
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Re: WCDT 21-25 March 2011 (1886-1890)
« Reply #356 on: 26 Mar 2011, 03:32 »

Re: Shakespeare:
[...]I had a professor in college who explained Shakespeare wasn't some longhair artiste but a guy who wrote what sold in his day ... Then explained all the dirty jokes. The effect was to make me regard Shakespeare as accessible and not some rarefied incomprehensibility.

This is SO the key.  God bless your professor.  The reason so many people get turned off to Shakespeare is that some teachers act like his works are some holy tome that have to be kept on a pedestal.  Are some of his plays the most incredible things that have ever been written in English?  Yes... but that's not how you get kids interested!  (Also, some of his plays [The Tempest, The Winter's Tale] are just not that great.)  Shakespeare wrote stuff that people would buy and that made the family of his most famous benefactor (i.e. Queen Elizabeth I) look like saints.  Dude knew where his bread was buttered.  And yeah, Shakespeare was a dirty motherfucker - his plays are rife with sex jokes, poop jokes, fart jokes, more sex jokes, and even more sex jokes. 

If you break down Othello into a story about a dude whose friend told him a lie about his girlfriend - hell, everyone can relate to that!  And that's really all that that play's about.  Once you get kids interested, then maybe they'll be open to understanding the beauty of the words, and then, who knows?

I was lucky in that I've just always been interested in words, so Shakespeare just sorta came naturally to me, and always fascinated me. 

How much did it influence me?  Well, I'm a professional Shakespearean actor... so, I guess, quite a bit  :-D
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Re: WCDT 21-25 March 2011 (1886-1890)
« Reply #357 on: 26 Mar 2011, 05:28 »

Damn right.  Any account I've read suggests that Shakespeare wasn't some tortured emo who stared wistfully at a vase of roses for inspiration, he was a storyteller.  Flowery writing and over-the-top symbolism is all well and good but you don't become as famous as he did if you're a one-trick pony.  He wrote what people liked and, well, people love a good laugh and a punch-up in between the love scenes, and Shakespeare delivered exactly that.

Romeo & Juliet includes a scene of Romeo and Mercutio basically exchanging "Do you know how I know you're gay?" jokes.  Hamlet pulls a "Rocks Fall, Everyone Dies" moment just for the hell of it.  No One Special just gave a fairly accurate summation of Othello being about a guy with the wrong idea about his ladyfriend.  Hell, even his less popular stuff like The Tempest has its moments, like two fellas roving about a desert island pissed as parrots, linking up with the play's equivalent of Igor the Manservant (who somehow decides the drunkards are from the Moon), before the inebriated trio decide to launch a spectacularly ineffective revolution against... well, they're not quite sure, but it's against someone!

Sure, when he got his lead up, Shakespeare could spout purple prose like nobody's business, there's no question about that.  It's just that he also loved fight scenes, dick jokes, and literally just making up words for the hell of it because fuck it, writing's too hard to bother about using the correct one when you can just spout gibberish and you know nobody's gonna call you on it.  And if you try to read Shakespeare as anything other than a guy with a sense of humour telling a story to entertain people, you're missing out on a lot of the good stuff in his work.
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akronnick

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Re: WCDT 21-25 March 2011 (1886-1890)
« Reply #358 on: 26 Mar 2011, 06:57 »

He was also, almost always working with a really tight deadline.

The show must...


Well, you know.
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Re: WCDT 21-25 March 2011 (1886-1890)
« Reply #359 on: 26 Mar 2011, 07:06 »

Re: Shakespeare:
[...]I had a professor in college who explained Shakespeare wasn't some longhair artiste but a guy who wrote what sold in his day ... Then explained all the dirty jokes. The effect was to make me regard Shakespeare as accessible and not some rarefied incomprehensibility.
  (Also, some of his plays [The Tempest, The Winter's Tale] are just not that great.) 

The Winter's Tale is a fantastic play and I will fight you if you say otherwise!

Seriously, 16 year disappearance of the female protagonist, the morbid jealousy is much more eloquently expressed, and the fact that it ends "well", in the sense that it is not a tragedy but a tragi-comedy/romance/problem play puts it above some others in my opinion. Also, Leontes isn't a character that you can just out and out hate, because he is his own Iago and feeds off of his own words and ideas. Its the implosion of the character that makes it interesting. Also you've got the parallels of Bohemia and Sicillia, two season, and damn, this play is home to Exit, pursued by a bear. Great stuff.
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Skelepunk

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Re: WCDT 21-25 March 2011 (1886-1890)
« Reply #360 on: 26 Mar 2011, 09:17 »

So what you're saying is, I must read The Winter's Tale. Because that sounds awesome. Why couldn't I have read that instead of Twelfth Night or king Lear?
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TheEvilDog

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Re: WCDT 21-25 March 2011 (1886-1890)
« Reply #361 on: 26 Mar 2011, 09:19 »

Why not try Macbeth, its one of his shortest plays, and has murder, murder, some murder, little bit of murder and oh, some witches.

Damn it, nearly forgot the murder too.
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Re: WCDT 21-25 March 2011 (1886-1890)
« Reply #363 on: 26 Mar 2011, 09:52 »

Only if you're inside a theater.






Or have a death wish.
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TheEvilDog

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Re: WCDT 21-25 March 2011 (1886-1890)
« Reply #364 on: 26 Mar 2011, 10:04 »

Or if you're an actor.

Or superstitious.

Or Ian McKellan.
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Carl-E

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Re: WCDT 21-25 March 2011 (1886-1890)
« Reply #365 on: 26 Mar 2011, 12:15 »

I've always been fond of A Midsummer Night's Dream.  It's the original British Farce.  mistaken identities, crossed lovers, and faeries, all running around in a forest.  Not to mention the backwoods theatre troupe that tries to put on a high-minded romance, with completely slapstick results. 

Oh yeah, and a man with the head of an ass. 

I'm pretty sure Puck is the prototype for Pintsize... "Lord, what fools these mortals be!" 
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Skelepunk

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Re: WCDT 21-25 March 2011 (1886-1890)
« Reply #366 on: 26 Mar 2011, 14:24 »

Hamlet and Macbeth are my favorite of all the plays. There was a very good Australian movie of Macbeth, only with guns and gangfights. It's much better than I've made it sound. 
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Re: WCDT 21-25 March 2011 (1886-1890)
« Reply #367 on: 26 Mar 2011, 14:24 »

Why not try Macbeth, its one of his shortest plays, and has murder, murder, some murder, little bit of murder and oh, some witches.

Damn it, nearly forgot the murder too.

And runs completly against the history on which it is "based".  Macbeth was actually a fairly popular ruler who came to the throne because his predecessor was a war mongering fool who keep losing to a bunch of Vikings.  Oh and he had these weird southern ideas about kingship passing through the male line to the son.  All good Scotsmen know that it passes to whomever the council of thanes (leading families) selects.
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Re: WCDT 21-25 March 2011 (1886-1890)
« Reply #368 on: 26 Mar 2011, 15:00 »

King Lear is also good but for morbid jealousy, Winter's Tale wins everytime.

But DUDES read Edward II by Christopher Marlowe because it is pretty awesome, a contemporary of Shakespeare and if you like sodomy with red hot pokers well, this will be your favourite piece of literature ever.

(I also enjoyed Jeph doing risque drawings again, I can tell he either sits there blushing or is like "damn, expression of the human body THROUGH a human body, I'm a genius")
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Re: WCDT 21-25 March 2011 (1886-1890)
« Reply #369 on: 26 Mar 2011, 15:24 »

"damn, expression of the human body INSIDE a human body, I'm a genius"
Fixed that for ya. :mrgreen:
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Re: WCDT 21-25 March 2011 (1886-1890)
« Reply #370 on: 26 Mar 2011, 15:54 »

Moment of the week: 1890 panel 1, showing Faye relaxed, happy, and sober.
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Re: WCDT 21-25 March 2011 (1886-1890)
« Reply #371 on: 26 Mar 2011, 16:47 »

Moment of the week: 1890 panel 1, showing Faye relaxed, happy, and sober.
I was literally just coming in here to comment on how adorable it was to see Faye making physical contact with a boy without either violence or threats of ultra-violence as a side -dish.
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Re: WCDT 21-25 March 2011 (1886-1890)
« Reply #372 on: 26 Mar 2011, 17:50 »

So obviously Marten's known Steve longer, but would it be accurate to say that Angus is now a closer friend?  His "main bro", if you will?
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Re: WCDT 21-25 March 2011 (1886-1890)
« Reply #373 on: 26 Mar 2011, 17:56 »

Well, if this thing with Faye doesn't implode, Angus and Marten are  going to be seeing a lot more of each other than the Marten-Steve bro-thing. 

Sooo.... maybe? 
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Re: WCDT 21-25 March 2011 (1886-1890)
« Reply #374 on: 26 Mar 2011, 20:28 »

...All good Scotsmen know that it passes to whomever the council of thanes (leading families) selects.

Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait!!!!!!!

So you're saying the chief executive should be selected by a body of political representatives based on merit and actual ability?!?!?!?!

That, sir, sounds suspiciously like the beginings of Democracy!!!!!

And we all know where that leads...

SOCIALISM!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

 :psyduck: :psyduck: :psyduck: :psyduck: :psyduck: :psyduck: :psyduck:
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Re: WCDT 21-25 March 2011 (1886-1890)
« Reply #375 on: 26 Mar 2011, 21:13 »

And carrying that through to it's (il)logical conclusion, that is just a step away form


COMMUNISM

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Re: WCDT 21-25 March 2011 (1886-1890)
« Reply #376 on: 26 Mar 2011, 21:49 »

I say we just scrap the whole system and install a philosopher king.  Which would be a lot easier if Bill Hicks were still alive.
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They call me Mr. Madness.

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MR ARCHIVE-FU MADNESS
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Re: WCDT 21-25 March 2011 (1886-1890)
« Reply #377 on: 26 Mar 2011, 22:17 »

Well, if this thing with Faye doesn't implode, Angus and Marten are  going to be seeing a lot more of each other than the Marten-Steve bro-thing. 

I think Marten has seen enough of Angus to last him a while.  :roll:


DO HO HO
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Re: WCDT 21-25 March 2011 (1886-1890)
« Reply #378 on: 26 Mar 2011, 22:36 »

I say we just scrap the whole system and install a philosopher king.  Which would be a lot easier if Bill Hicks were still alive.

You'd do better with Barry Crump
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Deadlywonky

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Re: WCDT 21-25 March 2011 (1886-1890)
« Reply #379 on: 26 Mar 2011, 22:47 »

I'm pretty sure Puck is the prototype for Pintsize... "Lord, what fools these mortals be!" 

Good lord, can you imagine Pintsize running around with a free supply of psychotropic drugs? it would be the inappropriate relationship drama from hell  :-o :police: (slashfic gone mad)
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Re: WCDT 21-25 March 2011 (1886-1890)
« Reply #380 on: 27 Mar 2011, 03:14 »

The QC WCDT Weekly Moment of the Week Poll !

Aaaactually, I was thinking...    - 0 (0%)
Sea cucumbers and Fuzzy Clams    - 5 (5.9%)
NEVERMIND.    - 0 (0%)
"A lady always reserves the right to change her mind."    - 1 (1.2%)
NSFW! NSFW! NSFW!    - 14 (16.5%) <--- Proof: Sex sells.
Run a marathon, pushups, juggle, wrestle a bear!    - 3 (3.5%)
"Are you always this hyper after sex, or am I just that good?"    - 0 (0%)
Operation: M.A.N.A.S.S.    - 9 (10.6%)
It's really more of a puce.    - 11 (12.9%)
Happy Arbor Day 2003!    - 13 (15.3%)
"You should've SEEN that party. It was CRAZY."    - 4 (4.7%)
He was gonna bake a cake...    - 0 (0%)
National Endowment for the Arts!    - 6 (7.1%)
I CAN STILL HEAR YOU, A$$#OLES!    - 9 (10.6%)
Daaaaaaaaaaaaannnnnngggg.    - 10 (11.8%)

Total Voters: 85
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Re: WCDT 21-25 March 2011 (1886-1890)
« Reply #382 on: 27 Mar 2011, 17:32 »

Why not try Macbeth, its one of his shortest plays, and has murder, murder, some murder, little bit of murder and oh, some witches. Damn it, nearly forgot the murder too.
And runs completly against the history on which it is "based".
Macbeth is an early example of a Southern English writer invoking the Violent Scotsman trope. Truly, it is older than steam.
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