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caitmcg

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Posts posted by caitmcg

  1. 9 hours ago, PRgal said:

    My hands are super dry/chapped thanks to the weather and frequent washing.  Any suggestions of moisturizers?  I've tried practically everything!

    My regular extra-moisturizing hand cream is the shea butter hand cream from L'Occitane en Provence (or, to be honest the relabeled stuff at Trader Joe's for $4.99 rather than $20+ for the same size). 

    7 hours ago, Mountainair said:

    Burt's Bees makes a hand salve that works great. It's not like a lotion it's like an oil that you rub on the dry spots, which for me is always the top of my hands. 

    I've gotten cracked skin on the back of my hands a couple of times, and the Burt's hand salve healed them. It's a bit greasy going on and has a strongish scent, but absorbs in a couple of minutes and the scent dissipates.

    • Love 2
  2. I don't watch a ton of TV, and in recent years, TGW was literally the only CBS show I watched (and like a lot of us, by the final season I was hate-watching my way to the end). I haven't had cable for years, and there have been a few shows on basic cable channels that don't provide streaming access (like FX and AMC) that I was willing to buy a season of on Amazon or iTunes so I could watch as it aired (and then own). I would never buy a streaming service (especially at $10/month) for just one or two shows, even if they're high quality. And of course, we have no idea whether the spinoff will be on par with the first two seasons of TGW, or the last two.

  3. 4 hours ago, MargeGunderson said:

    I do wish I could find a super hydrating eye cream - any recommendations? I can see the beginnings of crepiness, especially around my lash line. 

    My skin tends to moderate dryness, but more so around the eyes and I find a lot of eye creams too light (perhaps since so many are oil free). Clinique All About Eyes Rich is an exception for me.

    • Love 1
  4. 6 hours ago, Princess Sparkle said:

    And if you do find a brand where you are sure about the size, check out herroom.com.

    That site's a good resource. I was able to confirm through them that my favorite bra has sadly been discontinued. I've still got a few to wear (it was from Warner's, and I was always able to stock up easily through buy-2-get-1, sometimes even buy-2-get-2 sales at Macy's or online). Then I'll have to go bra shopping, which I dislike, to find a sub.

  5. Sooo...Carrie is both wigging off her meds and brilliant: check. Carrie and Dar Adal are against each other: check. Saul can't square his loyalty to/belief in Carrie with whether he can trust her judgment: check. Phil Collins cover: ack. Homeland seasons 1–5: rinse and repeat. That's all I got from that minute of my time.

  6. 1 hour ago, Princess Sparkle said:

    So, I recently bought Glossier's Boy Brow since I'd heard some good things about it and WOW

    Hey, I was coming here to rave about Boy Brow as well! Superior to any gel I've tried. It's a pomade-like formula and the texture is very supple; it holds well but isn't stiff at all, and it's easy to apply. I've never used a brow product with color before, but the small brush keeps the color on the hair only if that's what you want, which I appreciate (I barely wear makeup compared to most of you, and my aesthetic is very natural). The Blonde shade works perfectly for me (dark blond/light brown brows).

    I don't know that it's a holy grail, but I'm liking Glossier's Stretch concealer, too. It's got a light, creamy and comfortable texture that blends easily into bare skin (important to me, as I don't wear foundation) and doesn't get cakey or crease and settle into fine lines under the eyes. It's not highly pigmented, but coverage is buildable. 

    • Love 1
  7. Quote

    I wonder how the owner  felt when her dress was returned to her and she was told Nicole didn't want to wear it.  I guess I've developed feelings of loyalty to the women who live in the area, how poor most of them are, how much work just to wash and iron that dress, 

    The floral dress wasn't borrowed; she told Sister Mary Cynthia, "I brought the maternity dress from home" (i.e., Australia).

    • Love 4
  8. In the Guardian: The day we discovered our parents were Russian spies. The sons (then in high school and college) of the illegals arrested in 2010 who inspired The Americans, talk about what it was and is like to have their North American world upended à la Paige, but not quite.

    ETA: I now realize that this week-old article is old news for the more completist among us, though I just discovered it this morning (not, obviously, via these forums).

    • Love 1
  9. Anyone here NOT wear scents at all (besides lightly scented lotions)?

    It's been years since I've used scents, though I do like to use lightly scented soaps and lotions, usually something citrusy (lemon verbena is a favorite). Occasionally I'll get something custom scented at a local shop, Body Time. I'm currently using a lotion from there scented with neroli and grapefruit oils, a nice citrus-floral blend.

  10.  

    So much icky. Hard to believe a museum big enough to have a gift shop selling special exhibit mousepads, teeshirts, etc., is going to risk child porn publicity. A call to the press and the biggest donor would have solved the problem right away. 

     

    Per the show's usual MO, they based the subjects of this case on real folks, namely the photographer Sally Mann, who photographed her children. A New York Times magazine article explored the issues years ago, and last spring the NYT published an essay by Mann discussing her perspective and how public perceptions affected her family.

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  11.  

     

    One observation is tho I live in the Bay Area, I had to keep reminding myself all these years it was supposed to be taking place here because there was nothing that even had a whiff of this part of the country. Very very nowhere--sort of the way Friends and Seinfeld were in "NYC" and "Cheers" was in Boston and "The Good Wife" is in Chicago--all salient features and speech and ways of being evaporated in favor of some universal American way of being.

    That was probably the least important aspect of Parenthood, so no harm done. But it's sad that tv producers demand our regional differences have to be disappear into some sort of 2% reality-free half-gallon carton to be accepted nationwide. Maybe actual regional or even state differentiations could be put forward in 2015?

     

    This. As someone intimately familiar with the city and metro area the show was set in, I actually preferred when I could forget it was supposed to be taking place in Berkeley. Of course it doesn't look like the actual place, and one can't expect an LA-based show to do so, especially in exteriors (lots too big with too much space between houses - even large houses in the hills are pretty cheek-by-jowl so nothing like Zeek and Camille's property - sidewalks too wide and new, etc.). But what really got me was the show not even trying to reflect the place it was supposedly set, for instance, when everyone got concern-faced and "Is it safe?!11!" when Amber found her apartment in Oakland, as if Oakland were one big danger zone, or when Max referred to a freeway as "the" 280 (using "the" with route numbers is a So Cal convention, not used in Nor Cal). It would take so little effort to get simple stuff like that right and make it less generic.

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  12.  

    I thought the first 2 season of this show were about as perfect as a TV show could ever hope to be. Then things sort of went down hill.

     

    I've rewatched the first two seasons and found them to be just as compelling and binge-watchable as they were the first time around (I did see the first season on DVD, while DVRing the second, and my ex and I lost plenty of sleep marathoning). I don't need to see the rest again, but the energy (and constant cliffhangers) of S1 and 2 will draw me back in. 

     

    Among other things, I think the later seasons suffered from both the writers not actually knowing where they were taking the Rambaldi mythology, and J.J. Abrams's attention turning first to Lost, then movies.

    • Love 2
  13. I recently saw a trailer for The Grand Seduction, in which Taylor Kitsch stars as a doctor that a small down-at-heels Canadian town is trying to lure so they can land a factory deal. Sort of a folksy comedy with a bit of rom-com thrown in, I guess. I almost didn't recognize him clean cut with short hair, and with the Canadian accent he had to tame to play Riggins. Trailer here.

  14. Eric and Tami Taylor own this thread for me, but I also was a Matt and Julie fan when she wasn't being dumb.

     

    Will and Helen, and Luke and Grace on Joan of Arcadia.

     

    Sydney and Vaughn.

     

     

    Oh my goodness, Frasier and Lilith.  Niles and Daphne.  I never would have thought of them for this category, but they were so great.  Lilith rules.

     

    This.

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