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October 07, 2013 -- 7:54 PM
posted by alison
Ever have one of those days where you can't remember what you've done? ... but you did work, and you made stuff happen? How about a whole week?
I hate time sheets.
And I hate that I forget to do them until after I've forgotten what I did.
October 06, 2013 -- 1:28 AM
posted by Al
There is going to be a small novel and lots of line art for this guy. Go here for the goods.
October 03, 2013 -- 2:33 PM
posted by Par
If you're wondering what happened to Huell (Breaking Spoilers, kind of):
September 30, 2013 -- 11:37 PM
posted by Beck
Oh sorry, were you being productive?
Galapagos Island Diving Google Street View
Not anymore...
[edit]
Sharks
September 30, 2013 -- 2:09 AM
posted by alison
hello! Look what I found today, it's a Doctor Who thingy.
Also this:
November 23rd! John Hurt!!!
September 28, 2013 -- 7:45 PM
posted by alison
Hey friends, Eddie Izzard is touring Canada! ... and he's potentially running for mayor of London. So if you're at all into his kind of comedy, I recommend checking it out. He's on the left coast at the end of November, and is in Edmonton on the 22nd (of November).
"We can all do more than we think we can do." is a pretty good life slogan, mayor or not.
September 25, 2013 -- 10:38 PM
posted by Al
Hahaha!!
Good video guys!
Maybe as an inside joke when I get married after the first dance the first song to be played is "the Fox" song. Only people who read this board would be in on it.
September 24, 2013 -- 12:49 PM
posted by alison
Interesting... There's been a lot of commentary about Asian stereotypes in television lately, actually. ... like this article from Salon.
And there's furor over Seth MacFarlane's newest show that's not even out yet: Dads, because of the shitty stereotypes they're playing into.
While I agree that Apu's Indianness was a (now very dated and unacceptable) cartoon caricature of a recent immigrant, I agree with Matt that at least he had story arcs and explored important issues as a fully realized character on the Simpsons. I think I learned more about Apu's life than I did Lenny or Karl, for instance; and Barney, too, for that matter. He was sympathetic and engaging as a character to watch, and not because he was a foreign stereotype. ... even if some of his lifestyle stuff was particularly stereotyped (like the vegetarian diet, the shrines, the working in a convenience store thing, etc.). [edit: I gave it a bit more thought: I think Apu ended up having more serious "this is a real guy, not just a tragic one-liner/typecast punchline (e.g. Barney)" character development stories over the years than a lot of the other supporting characters on the show, like Lenny and Karl, or Moe or Principal Skinner. But maybe there's a hierarchy of character development at play here too that looks something like The Simpsons family proper, Flanders, Apu, Patty & Selma, everybodyelse... Or maybe I just liked Apu more than some of the other characters and therefore remember his stories better than others. Who knows.]
Raj on the Making-Fun-Of-Nerds show, however, is the ultimate stereotypical punchline, within a show where everyone is used as a punchline. ... But at least Leonard and Sheldon are given non-culturally-exclusive reasons for their weirdness. Meanwhile Howard and Raj fall into the territory of stereotypically ethnic weirdness, with Raj being trapped in the bottom of a really deep pit of racially-motivated differentiation, and few redeeming qualities or opportunities within his character's story arc. Howard, I think gets this "oh, he's Jewish" brush-off, but then he's allowed back into the fold of white nerdity without any further problems.
Contrasting I seriously forgot the name... Big Bang Theory with, say, The Guild makes it even more obvious. In The Guild, everyone's a shut-in and everyone's weird; the Indian guy has some additional cultural challenges (aka his mom), but he's so much more than just that one piece of his character. Raj on Big Bang, however, is not. Raj's sister, as an occasional visitor/lover of Leonard's seems less tied-down to the ethnic-punchline role her brother has been condemned to play on the show.