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selkie

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Posts posted by selkie

  1. 10 hours ago, Darknight said:

      Yagudin bashed Jason for not having quads and for not skating like a man. I have no clue what skating like a man means or looks like. I truly don't understand what is wrong with him and Russian fed. What did Jason and Rika do? I think it's amazing Jason can skate without a quad and podium and be competitive. 

    Russia has a hella homophobic culture in a lot of ways so my first inclination is to hear it as that kind of slur against Jason. 

    • Love 3
  2. On 11/17/2019 at 2:36 PM, Bastet said:

     Periods only exist as a plot point, and almost always in a narrow way that too often revolves around how the men in a menstruating or menopausal woman's life are affected by her cycle -- she's moody, she doesn't want to have sex, she's got the bedroom windows open and the ceiling fan going in January, etc. and Poor Befuddled Male is just hanging on for the ride.

    And then there was 'Babylon 5', where Delenn's 'I seem to be having these cramps' line to Susan Ivanovs seemed to be a bit of a throwaway line at first, but then in true JMS/B5 style it ends up being a clue about a huge plot point involving her becoming human enough that she could actually have a child with Sheridan several years down the road.

    As long as I'm thinking of JMS shows, cramps made a reappearance in 'Sense 8', where you have a group of people who who can feel everything the rest of their cluster is feeling, and there's a bit where Sun gets horrible cramps and Lito ends up feeling like he's about to keel over and die from her pain. 

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  3. And followed by a women's marathon world record that will officially 'count' pending ratification.

    https://www.letsrun.com/news/2019/10/brigid-kosgei-runs-21404-shatters-womens-marathon-world-record-at-2019-chicago-marathon/

    Quote

    For over 16 years, Paula Radcliffe’s 2:15:25 world record, set at the 2003 London Marathon, had stood as one of the most unbreakable records in the sport of running. Radcliffe wasn’t just the only woman to break 2:16; she was the only woman to break 2:17.

    Until today.  On a cool, crisp, slightly breezy day on the streets of Chicago (41 degrees Fahrenheit), Kosgei took a hammer to Radcliffe’s mark by running 2:14:04 to smash the world record. On the strength of major marathon victories in Chicago last year and London earlier this year, Kosgei entered Sunday’s race as the planet’s top female marathoner. She finished it as the fastest woman to ever run the distance, and one of the sport’s all-time legends.

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  4. 3 hours ago, AimingforYoko said:

    The US had a very, very good track meet at the Worlds in Doha. (They never should've been there, but we'll save corruption for another day). Topping the list, the US men reclaiming the 4 x 100 relay. Barring injury or doping, Tokyo looks bright.

    Because I'm a very cynical American track fan, I hold that the biggest upset of the meet was that the American men's 4x100 managed three clean and fast exchanges in the event final. 

    It was a highly entertaining WCs and I'm excited to see so many great performers here and hope they do even better in Tokyo. 

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  5. When an athlete or athletes seemingly past their prime seem determined to keep going anyways, I figure if they can say that a) their sport is still paying them well enough to cover their bills and b) they still really enjoy getting up and going to work in the morning most days, then I'll just leave them alone until they decide it doesn't make sense any more for them. 

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  6. I don't remember if  Kim did much with doubles. Martina Hingis had a pretty god run as a doubles player long after she gave up the singles game, so that could be a pro option. 

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  7. 5 hours ago, biakbiak said:

    Considering Iranians Middle Eastern not Asian is standard. I have never heard someone from Iran refer to themselves as Asian but perhaps some do but I don’t believe she identifies that way. 

     The USA legally defines Middle Eastern persons as white. It goes back to the lobbying of early Syrian and Lebanese immigrants in the 19th century who wanted to being family members over and who were legitimately concerned that if they got labeled as Asian, they would get caught up in laws designed to ban any additional Chinese immigration to the US West. 

    It's only really been in recent years that there's been a push for a new designation for Middle Eastern/North African in US law and census documentation that would cover Arabs and Persians/Iranians. 

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  8. On 9/8/2019 at 1:27 PM, Bastet said:

    So, somehow, the fact people don't, in real life, randomly break into song and dance makes the lack of realism a problem for me on film, but not when sitting there watching a live performance.

    I was in a Tijuana Flats (inauthentic but tasty fast casual 'Mexican' food) over the weekend, and Sweet Caroline came on the radio. While there was no outright dancing involved, more than half the restaurant did indeed end up singing along to the chorus for no real reason other than it was fun 

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  9. 22 hours ago, kiddo82 said:

     Bonus points if said town is on the East Coast and the town history involves a revolutionary war battle or Washington once stopped there for a beer or something.  

    I am reminded of the scene in Homicide:LOTS when the detectives who own the bar are told they need to get approval from some sort of Baltimore historic preservation committee before doing very necessary work on the building because Washington might have peed in the latrine there. 

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  10. The Vuelta cinematography still pales in comparison to Le Tour, but it's actually significantly better than it was five years ago, when it seemed like they were running the whole operation using five old Betamax cameras they'd found in a random Basque separatist's back tool shed. 

    Two stages in and it's a lot of fun since no one really knows what they heck is going on yet. 

    Earlier this summer, the UCI did a global fan survey, and apparently I'm not alone in preferring my races to be less predictable

    https://www.insidethegames.biz/articles/1083905/uci-road-survey-results

  11. 53 minutes ago, jhlipton said:

    Thanks for the info -- that's put it back on my radar.

    As to what I watched, it looked like tWoT -- one scene was a woman preparing to leave a castle with a guy who looked like Marcus Rutherford, with both on horseback.  
    *** But I realize now that what I saw was on network TV, and tWOT will be on Amazon, sometime in 2020.  Now I wonder what the heck I saw!!!!

    Amazon is not the first media group to make an attempt at a WoT adaptation. A previous holder of the tv/movie rights actually made a (by all accounts really horrible) pilot for the show in order to trigger a clause that would extend the time frame of the original rights and it apparently aired briefly on overnight cable tv 

    https://www.wired.com/2015/02/wheel-of-time-tv-pilot/

    https://io9.gizmodo.com/the-real-story-about-that-wheel-of-time-pilot-that-aire-1684773094

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  12. On 8/17/2019 at 1:09 AM, Anela said:

    I remember all of this. I think I was ten when they aired it in England, and I was glued to the TV. We used to watch all of the miniseries, but I can't remember all of their names. Like The Burning Bed, or the one where she shot her children (another true crime story), I Know My First Name is Steven. Lace. 

    See also: 'A Cry for Help: the Tracy Thurman Story'. Along with 'The Burning Bed'  we watched that in a class called Family Living in high school, which really was the case where it was a class run by the assistant football coach and you were pretty much guaranteed to get an A for showing up, watching a bunch of proto-Lifetime movies and writing a few paragraphs on how domestic violence was, like, a really really bad thing. 

    • Love 1
  13. On 8/14/2019 at 10:45 PM, DearEvette said:

    And Finally, I read that Brandon Sanderson had been a consultant on the show and he has stated that they are cutting a LOT and said some fans will be furious but to take the adaptation on its own merits.  I mean, there is no way this is workable without a lot of cuts. 

    I admit it is making me want to revisit the books now.

    Honestly, I know I'm not the only person who felt like Robert Jordan lost anything resembling control over his cast of literal thousands somewhere around book 7 or 8 and will regard it as a Good Thing if they cut and consolidate a lot from those middle books before Sanderson sadly ( for those unfamiliar with the books, he was the one who was contracted to finish the series after original author Robert Jorden passed away) had to wrestle a whole bunch of overly rambling plotlines back into place to get the end of the series to work. 

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  14. 5 hours ago, Homily said:

    I'm not sure if this is a trope or not but what bugs me on TV a lot is that when a character is allowed to be overweight they can't just "need to lose a few pounds" like most of us - there is no in between on TV,  if you aren't Hollywood thin then you are extremely overweight.  I know most people on TV (and in the movies) don't look like the rest of us but it really annoys me that no one seems to be allowed to carry a few extra pounds and that's ok.  You're thin or you're FAT.

    The rare exceptions to this include Merrit Wever as Zoe on Nurse Jackie, and Lena Dunham as Hannah on Girls, and in Dunham's case she was also producing the show and casting herself as a lead. 

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  15. On 7/29/2019 at 8:38 PM, kiddo82 said:

    Jack Bauer.

    But word on Doug Ross.  I got back into ER a few years ago thanks to Pop and I forgot how insufferable he could be,  

    We've been doing an ER rewatch ourselves, and I'm finding myself really strongly on Team Kerry Weaver during the clashes between those two doctors. Yeah Kerry was an ambitious weasel many a time but she also was generally pretty solid on patient and hospital ethics concerns. 

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  16. And if anyone wants another datapoint on why it's a bad idea to pick your 2019 team in 2018, Ryan Held just went 47.43 in the 100 free prelims. This is a new US Open record (fastest swim by an athlete of any nationality on US soil) and is faster than the bronze medal time at Worlds. 

    Regan Smith is the top qualifier in the 200 butterfly, and it's going to be interesting to see her progress. We're in between generational talents right now in that event (2019 World champion Boglarka Karpas was nearly a second slower than Mary Meagher's 2:05.9 at Brown Deer in 1981) and while the Olympic final will be faster, anyone who can go a 2:06 remains a medal contender in the race

    This is a selection meet for the broader (not for a specific international event) US National and US Junior National teams and a top 8 or top 16 world ranking coming out of this meet can mean a bigger paycheck from USA Swimming for 2020. 

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