The most recent 20 comments posted to Making Light by Angelle:

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Posted on entry Have a Dysfunctional Families Day ::: September 21, 2008, 10:05 AM:
The link to the brilliant Dune card makes it worth any risk I could incur by celebrating this blessed day.

It's a year almost to the day since I moved 2,500 miles away from my less-than-functional kin, and it was the smartest thing I ever did. From this remove, I can acknowledge they did they best they could while still working to repair the damage.

Hell, I'm even thinking about starting a little dysfunctional family of my own out here. I think I might be able to bear the Kwisatz Haderach, but don't tell my mother . . .
Posted on entry Teresa in the Observer ::: April 26, 2008, 10:53 PM:
PNH @11: Whoops! Mea culpa - I blame the sleepiness.
Posted on entry Teresa in the Observer ::: April 26, 2008, 10:10 PM:
Wow. Just . . . wow.

I'm also narcoleptic, albeit of a more subdued variety. My
constellation of symptoms doesn't include catalepsy, but I've got all
the rest.

I had never heard about the connection with writing. I just knew that I fell asleep at the computer an awful
lot and that pieces of a length greaterthan flash fiction were
difficult to maintain voice, POV, pacing, and nearly everything else.
Still, the writing continues, with whatever new work around is getting
it done this week.

Thanks, Teresa. It's always good to hear you're not alone.
Posted on entry Left-coast storm ::: January 06, 2008, 10:01 AM:
40 - That sent me scrambling to find the Sepulveda Basin on a map - just west of the pass and the 405, yes?
Posted on entry Left-coast storm ::: January 05, 2008, 08:43 PM:
I suppose it's what I get for posting in the wee small hours of my morning, but I wasn't very clear - when I said "not built for it," I meant it in both a natural (soil composition and elevation)and human-constructed sense. My town in Ohio was pretty much wiped off the map by a trio of angry rain-swollen rivers in 1913, leading to an elaborate levy system that we all learned about as school kids. I do NOT mock the destructive capacity of fire, water, or wind.

We were lucky in LA proper, actually - we were slated to get three storms, but the first one passed north of us and blew over semis trying to cross the desert. Only one fatality associated with storm #2, and storm #3 still pending.

Blogger Here in Van Nuys has some interesting pictures from previous heavy rains - 1938 and '52. The '38 picture shows the part of the LA River I cross every day. A very different view. But the dangerous combination of water and SoCal hasn't changed much.



Posted on entry Left-coast storm ::: January 05, 2008, 11:56 AM:
Here on the backside of the Hollywood Hills, we got about 12 solid hours of rain, and having just moved here from the midwest, my observation is that this place is just not set up to handle it. According to the papers, the SFV got most of the flooding.

Major roads have dips built into them (to slow people down? Sort of an inverse speed bump?) that become foot-deep creeks at times like this. We live on the LA "River", which is usually a thin strip of water running down the middle of a 50-yd-wide concrete gully. Yesterday, when I was walking home from the bus stop, the whole basin was full and moving at break neck speed.

This is the second of three storms we're supposed to get; the first missed us but hit SF. And while I agree with Stephan @#8 about the "sky is falling" tone, the truth is they really are not used to this out here.
Posted on entry A Jackson and a hummer ::: August 08, 2007, 12:56 PM:
Caroline @36: I'm glad you explained it - I was going to, but couldn't really word it well.

On a related note, to the "$20 AND a blowjob?" chorus - through my husband's line of work (he's a musician), we became socially acquainted with a number of "swinger" couples. Strangest quote I've ever heard one man say to another in a bar?

"If I buy you cocaine, will you sleep with my wife?"

This is why I leave my house; the world is where they keep the good stories.
Posted on entry Open thread 89 ::: July 28, 2007, 02:41 PM:
As I was sounding out the excerpt, it took me right back to one of my favorite college professors, who spoke beautiful old and middle English, and taught me the Pearl Poet one summer.

I love texts like this because my eyes won't scan them, but if I say it aloud phonetically, the words magically resolve themselves into something familiar. A delightful form of code-cracking - thanks!
Posted on entry If it weren't so blatant, I'd think it was plagiarism ::: May 30, 2007, 02:06 PM:
This was the MySpace message I sent Mark in Salt Lake City earlier:

Subject: Son, the internet caught you with your pants down

You've taken down your typepad blog. Probably for the best.

If you want to be a writer, or even if you don't, stop stealing other people's work and trying to pass it off as your own.

The internet is watching.
Posted on entry If it weren't so blatant, I'd think it was plagiarism ::: May 30, 2007, 12:56 PM:
His Murderous Vegans

Salon's Carol Lloyd's Murderous Vegans

He's lucky he wasn't more widely read (most of his 'posts' have 0 comments) or people might take his little transgression more seriously. Like lawsuit seriously.
Posted on entry If it weren't so blatant, I'd think it was plagiarism ::: May 30, 2007, 12:20 PM:
You know what's sad? He's probably thrilled to see his page views climbing this morning; little does he know it's to seal his doom. *cackling whilst screenshooting*
Posted on entry If it weren't so blatant, I'd think it was plagiarism ::: May 30, 2007, 12:16 PM:
Looks like the reporter has graduated, at least from this.

Posted on entry If it weren't so blatant, I'd think it was plagiarism ::: May 30, 2007, 11:50 AM:
Wow. That's just, kinda, astounding.

Does it say something positive about my outlook on humanity that I'm actually surprised?

And I second Susan: Who is this guy?

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