And some no one from the future remembers that you're gone
Still toast. Successfully collected my father from the airport two nights ago. Would like my capacity for movies to get back online before I run out of month in which to write about them. Would also like our next-door neighbor to have ceased to use loud air-whining machineries after seven p.m.
I saw the news of the death of Pope Francis. If it was going to be one of his last public statements, the construction site of Hell was an incredibly metal image to go out on.
I was not expecting to see the news that Willy Ley had been found in a can in a co-op on 67th Street. The idea of sending his ashes to space is completely correct and I wouldn't put SpaceX anywhere near that gesture. I could rewatch Frau im Mond (1929) for his memory.
Playing Stan Rogers' "Macdonnell on the Heights" (1984) for
spatch may actually have counter-observed Patriots' Day, but my point still stands that the song has successfully superseded its chorus, or at least one in ten thousand seems to underrate Rogers' influence.
Personally I would ask Nigel Havers about the 1986 LWT A Little Princess.
I saw the news of the death of Pope Francis. If it was going to be one of his last public statements, the construction site of Hell was an incredibly metal image to go out on.
I was not expecting to see the news that Willy Ley had been found in a can in a co-op on 67th Street. The idea of sending his ashes to space is completely correct and I wouldn't put SpaceX anywhere near that gesture. I could rewatch Frau im Mond (1929) for his memory.
Playing Stan Rogers' "Macdonnell on the Heights" (1984) for
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Personally I would ask Nigel Havers about the 1986 LWT A Little Princess.
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After an entire day of reading and hearing praise for him, I appreciate that this doesn't immediately make me want to throw up. About someone like him, who looked the other way (or worse) as some of his fellow Jesuits were disappeared by the military, covered up pedophile priests, fought against gender identity, sex education, abortion and same-sex marriage laws (referring to this last one as "a plan of the devil"), all I can say is: good riddance, he won't be missed.
On a less grumpy note (sorry about that!), I hope you get some good rest (and possibly some capacity for movies)! <3
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Well, that's good. It is not an effect I ever want to have on you!
I hope you get some good rest (and possibly some capacity for movies)!
Thank you! I have done primarily nothing with the day and am endeavoring to do primarily nothing with my evening. Further bulletins as non-events warrant.
*hugs*
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Edit: I will, of course, see to your top hat and tails. Do you feel like the occasion would want white spats?
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I'll sure as hell wear the cufflinks.
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BOOM TOMORROW.
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I am quite puzzled that there was a 1986 TV A Little Princess and we somehow didn't watch it, but there you go. It was probably because of it being ITV or maybe it was a Sunday when we were out or something. We watched a version of The Secret Garden on the BBC around the same time and loved it.
Which is to say, what is it that you would ask Nigel Havers about it?
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It's wonderful, if you are region-permitted to watch it off YouTube. Amelia Shankley, Maureen Lipman, Miriam Margolyes, Natalie Abbott, Nigel Havers, Antony Zaki, David Yelland, Meera Syal, and probably some other people I am forgetting. It is not one of the adaptations of a book I read at a formative age where I want to scream about any changes.
Which is to say, what is it that you would ask Nigel Havers about it?
The questions I imagine anybody would ask! How did he feel about being in a beloved children's classic? Had he read it to his daughter? Had he read it on his own time? (Any feelings about Carrisford being a lot more of a disaster than his traditional range of charmers? I am very fond of his Carrisford.)