- RT @ChrissieM: RT @ldn: Beekeeping for troubled 16 to 19-year-olds across London http://bit.ly/2zd5lA #bees 11:16:51
- @rachelgeorge set your ninjas on them in reply to rachelgeorge 11:21:44
- @smartmatt It really depends on your reading volume – for me an ereader is great and has worked out cheaper in the long run. in reply to smartmatt 11:49:20
- Every few months I get the urge to dye my hair pink, but am foiled by the job. It's that time again
11:53:04 - @smartmatt real books are great too, especially for reading in the bath. but for going on holiday, or just taking the train to work? ebooks in reply to smartmatt 18:53:02
- @smartmatt although I've got to the point with my ereader where pressing the thing to turn to the next page *feels* like turning a real one in reply to smartmatt 18:54:16
- RT @McKelvie: Tories edit Wikipedia entry on European ally Kaminski, removing reference to his far-right past: http://bit.ly/1XtYRM 18:55:48
- @snacky you tell her it's because she has not sacrificed enough souls to Baal in reply to snacky 18:57:34
- @SuperCricket …that's the darkest point in your life? Admittedly, I know nothing about Canadian history… in reply to SuperCricket 19:01:04
- @krazycat wow. that's kind of scary. I'd just started school then. in reply to krazycat 19:02:55
- @understood sadly yes. sometimes I meet with clients so even if I dyed my hair company colours, it still wouldn't really be on in reply to understood 19:04:34
- @krazycat I can kind of sea where he's coming from with that. Octopus and Universe feel similar in reply to krazycat 19:19:49
Category Archives: reBlogged
Stuff from all my other blogs and journals
Tweets for 2009-10-19
- RT @mrtonylee Go to http://is.gd/4qRPH and read WHERE EVILS DARE. Vamps. Zombies. Werewolves. Register (takes 1 min) and then VOTE FOR US! 18:29:15
- @sebpatrick Woah. in reply to sebpatrick 18:37:37
- @sebpatrick EXCELLENT. in reply to sebpatrick 18:43:18
Tweets for 2009-10-18
- RT @JhonenV: Where the Wild Things are was the worst! Not at all what I expected. Where was Neve Campbell? Where was Denise Richards?! 13:40:01
- @rachelgeorge No, not Milton Keynes surely!?!?! in reply to rachelgeorge 13:40:43
- @danielguntrip i'm sure there's some joke about being "alright" and wanting to "stay another day" but I'm too tired to make it work in reply to danielguntrip 21:54:57
- @krazycat and there I was hoping for Oklahoma and X-Men spliced together somehow. Guess I'll have to dig out my dvds and do it myself in reply to krazycat 21:58:07
Tweets for 2009-10-17
- Is it just me or is the travelsphere call centre staffed by fools? 09:49:44
- @SuperCricket Still haven't read Twilight you know. I tried and only got about 4 chapters in… in reply to SuperCricket 09:51:34
- normal bizarre cough has turned into freakish gurgly hacking cough.
doubleplusunwin 14:01:38 - @nikki Doooo iiit in reply to nikki 14:03:55
- Norway has a better looking Prime Minister than us. Can't believe Gordon Brown was ranked higher than Angela Merkel tho http://bit.ly/dW3hn 16:33:20
- @thehistoryguy if Trafigura's in uh…today's papers than that'd be good. in reply to thehistoryguy 23:34:07
- @McKelvie Do it. Animated Batman is win in reply to McKelvie 23:35:11
- So glad I'm an evening/night person AND a morning person, made going to work after getting back late from Hampton Court on Thursday bearable 23:37:47
- Of course that does mean that I'm not so much an afternoon or early evening person… 23:38:44
- …and I can see myself flagging a bit in about 12 hours or so, just when mum wants to go grocery shopping. :/ 23:44:27
all those things you feel
My mum is currently watching the cinematic masterpiece that is Hercules in New York starring a certain Arnold Schwarzenegger.
How do I know? Well, the shrieks of laughter are kind of a giveaway….
I kind of wish I had the dubbed version, rather than the one were Arnie is actually allowed to speak though.
Tweets for 2009-10-16
- RT @smartmatt: I was wondering why #janmoir is trending. http://tinyurl.com/yl5wgwt what a cold-hearted cow. 18:03:11
- Scary http://bit.ly/f0HHm 18:20:54
Tweets for 2009-10-15
- @shanucore that would be hilarious.
in reply to shanucore 08:29:35
tonight we drink to youth and holding fast to truth
Yesterday I spent the entire afternoon at Hampton Court Palace, cleverly arriving in time to watch the school kids all leave so that I didn’t have to worry about inadvertently knocking one over when moving backwards to get a better view of something. Woohoo.
The marriage of Henry VIII and Katherine Parr has been re-enacted daily there and I have to say that the guy wandering about as Henry VIII was WICKED. He was hilarious and really interact well with the general public. Didn’t see much of Katherine Parr as I was too busy wandering about doing audio tours to be in the right place at the right time to catch the rest of the festivities.
In the evening, I attended the discussion on “Henry VIII on Stage and Screen” (chaired by Dan Snow and featuring Thomas S Freeman, Gregory Thompson, Greg Walker and Susan Doran), which was way interesting and like the giant geek that I am, I remembered to bring a notebook to make notes. Although it’s not just because I’m a geek, it’s because I tend to forget earlier points when I get caught up in the later ones 😀
Henry VIII is one of those kings that children remember because he got married 6 times and he had an extreme fondness for execution. Which is great. The multiple marriages thing kind of makes him more accessible, in the same way that Elizabeth Taylor is accessible. Or maybe not. At least the whole set up of his family – different children from different mothers and wives who became essentially sisters and all the wacky hijinks that went on back then are kind of a familiar story.
The whole hard-on for execution and Henry’s famed temper are also one of those things that show up a heck of a lot on telly and in film – I guess because it makes for interesting viewing (and maybe more so for the current generation who are all obviously apparently hopped up on violent computer games and similarly violent music! Or something :P)
Interestingly, something that was pointed out and something that I’ve not really thought about was that Henry’s attitude towards his wives and daughters changes depending on the time the play/film was written and tends to be more in line with the thinking contemporary to that of the play or film.
I can’t help but wonder that there is a heck of a lot missing from the picture of Henry VIII that most people (myself included even after attending this talk!) have of him. Not much is said about his life other than for his marriages, his children, his rage and his gluttony, at least in a form that is accessible to the masses. I guess The Tudors is helping to “adjust” the idea that Henry was this big fat angry bloke and that in his youth at least he was apparently hot and charismatic, though some of that has to be the allure of power perhaps. I’ll probably do more reading about him (to add to the HUGE stack of WW1 and WW2 books I’m ploughing through).
So, to summarise – Hampton Court Palace was wicked and the discussion I went to was well cool. As it were.
And I even remembered to check out an essay about Henry VIII that was mentioned during the evening! Mostly because I wrote that one down, but it does bring up some interesting points.
And then…. I got home and realised I was wearing my “I put the cute in execute” t-shirt. Muahahahaha.
Tweets for 2009-10-14
- @shanucore Makes perfect sense in reply to shanucore 18:10:47
Tweets for 2009-10-13
- @shanucore Me too in reply to shanucore 11:21:53
- RT @serafinowicz: RT @charltonbrooker: RT @Charliecondou: What the Guardian cant say http://bit.ly/lp0y8 #Trafigura 11:26:23
- @penguinonrocks @supercricket has a heart? I thought he ran on clockwork? in reply to penguinonrocks 19:50:18