cellio: (lilac)
[personal profile] cellio
The story about the elephant is the funniest thing I've read in days.

I have a new front-runner in the "deceptive marketing" category. Today I examined a bag of Glenny's Soy Crisps, which proudly proclaims "10 grams pure soy protein" and "only 65 calories per serving". However, it is not 10 grams of protein per serving. (The bag contains two servings, so it's 5g protein per 65 calories.)

Yesterday I came into the office to find a keyboard tray peeking out from beneath my desk. I wondered how long it had been there without my noticing; it was possible to push it back well out of sight, so it could have been there for a long time. The mystery was solved when someone walked into my office later and found me, not my office-mate, sitting at my desk. Apparently he'd installed it the previous night, but in the wrong place. I suppose that beats the alternative outcomes. :-) (No, I don't want a keyboard tray; my arms aren't long enough to use one with proper posture.)

Tonight was an On the Mark practice. Jenn has decided to leave the group due to an attack of life. It's unfortunate, but I understand. I don't want anyone to burn out. Ray is staying, so we'll juggle some parts around and things will be ok.

Tonight's episode of Enterprise, "Cogenitor", had a dreadful preview. It was also one of the best episodes of the show to date. That was an extremely pleasant surprise. (Ok, I saw every key plot point well ahead of schedule, but that didn't hurt the show, as it turned out. Now we just have to wait and see if they actually follow through on this in future episodes.)

Embla lay down in my lap while I was watching the show tonight. She's never done that before. Yay! It took five and a half years, but she's finally comfortable enough to actually settle down in my lap, rather than just walking across it and then scampering away. Progress. :-)

(no subject)

Date: 2003-05-01 09:30 am (UTC)
jducoeur: (Default)
From: [personal profile] jducoeur
"Believers" is one of my favorite B5 episodes

Oooh, I so don't agree. "Believers" makes me completely crazy, because it's one of the most Trekky episodes of B5. There's a certain ham-fistedness of the moral that makes me nuts. I mean, I understand what the moral of the story is, and it's a good one, and in general it's not a terribly written episode. But there's just something so blatant about it that it simply annoys me, simply in the way that it jumps up and down and screams, "Look! Look! Here's a Moral!"

One of the things I like about B5 is that it tends not to have that ST:TNG hitting-you-over-the-head thing. This is one of the episodes that does...

(no subject)

Date: 2003-05-01 11:44 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tangerinpenguin.livejournal.com
What saved it for me was that the moral dilemma wasn't completely unambiguous. Trek would deliver a ham-fisted moral, but most modern Americans would agree that it was the "right" one from fairly early in the episode, or at least find it uncomfortable to argue for the alternative. You can point to a dozen or so Trek episodes where they essentially did what the doctor here did and it worked out OK. In The Believers, I think most of the audience would tend to believe that, at least in some idealistic sense, the doctor's arguments were more "right" than the family's ("not that it necessarily excused what he did, but if he could just have talked sense into them." That sort of way in which it's very hard to really appreciate an ideaology that alien to your own.) I think it was interesting to see the story suggest that it wasn't as cut and dried as just coming down on the moral position we found most sympathetic, by whatever means that then requires.

GROPOS, on the other hand, was a real sledgehammer to the knees :-)

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags