Everything we do tonight is wrong, wrong, wrong
From
kraada, a meme. I will be out of town for the weekend and potentially AWOI (absent without internet), so my replies may take a few days, but—
Comment and I will:
1. Tell you why I added you to my friends list and/or why I keep you there.
2. Associate you with something. A song, a color, a work of art, a character in a play, a piece of fruit. SOMETHING.
3. Tell you something I like about you.
4. Tell you a memory I have of you/us.
5. Associate you with a character from a book or a film.
6. Ask something I've always wanted to know about you. (Or else I'll just ask a random question. I reserve that right.)
7. Tell you my favorite user pic of yours.
8. In return, you must spread this disease in your LJ.
Comment and I will:
1. Tell you why I added you to my friends list and/or why I keep you there.
2. Associate you with something. A song, a color, a work of art, a character in a play, a piece of fruit. SOMETHING.
3. Tell you something I like about you.
4. Tell you a memory I have of you/us.
5. Associate you with a character from a book or a film.
6. Ask something I've always wanted to know about you. (Or else I'll just ask a random question. I reserve that right.)
7. Tell you my favorite user pic of yours.
8. In return, you must spread this disease in your LJ.

no subject
no subject
To rhyme with "theme," I believe. I am fairly certain the common internet usage is a bastardization of the original definition, which has more to do with the cultural equivalent of genes—transmissable packets of information; technologies, melodies, superstitions—than with humorous questionnaires, but that's language for you.
1. Because I only now found out you have a livejournal.
2. The Devil’s Interval's "Studying Economy."
3. You have the talent of making anecdotes about your life into full-fledged performances of storytelling, even casually, which I prize.
4. You pointed to a lengthily incomprehensible acronym of a sign over the inner lintel of the restaurant's door and said, "If I tell you what it means, will you buy me a drink?"
5. Vir Cotto, from Babylon 5 (1994—1998).
6. If you left Catholicism (if one can leave Catholicism), toward what other faith, if any, would you gravitate?
7. I had actually been meaning to ask what yours is . . .
no subject
I should probably try to watch an episode of that sometime.
6. If you left Catholicism (if one can leave Catholicism), toward what other faith, if any, would you gravitate?
No contest--Hinayana Buddhism. Even if it would mean learning even MORE languages.
7. I had actually been meaning to ask what yours is . . .
El Greco's View of Toledo. It got sadly mashed-up when lj made it small.
Thanks!
no subject
You should watch the whole five-year arc. The first season is mostly groundwork for the ways in which the characters will change, and the fifth suffers from a cancellation and reboot that severely shortchanged its plotting, but the second through the fourth seasons are mythic science-fictional genius. I am currently rewatching the series for the first time since high school and I am still impressed.
No contest--Hinayana Buddhism. Even if it would mean learning even MORE languages.
Why that particular school of Buddhism?
El Greco's View of Toledo. It got sadly mashed-up when lj made it small.
I'm afraid I wouldn't have recognized it as Toledo, yes. Why that painting?
(Feel free not to answer; the meme only specified one question.)