They're all looking at that clip on YouTube that you posted. And watching it over and over and over and over again and again and again and again and again...
Good Afternoon!Well... I have yet to make it out of the apartment... However, during the interim, I've followed up on two potential work leads, booked two more audition sessions, bought my plane tickets to and from Memphis for the upcoming UPTAs, taken a shower, gotten dressed, etc., etc., etc.And now I'm checking to see if there's anything I'd like to see tonight. I really am interested in seeing Teri Ralston at The Metropolitan Room tonight, but for some unexplained reason, I'm in the mood for some opera tonight. Maybe it's all the talk of pasta today here on HHW. -Alas, tonight's presentation at The Met is Wagner's "Die Walküre", and that's 5 hours of Wagner. -Which for some, is five hours too many. However, the curtain time is 6:30 (ends at 11:30), and I may see if anyone is giving an extra ticket on the Plaza. And if not, I still have plenty of time to head elsewhere. -It's also Splash's first Musical Mondays of 2008 too, so...
I am not planning on serving der Brucer pasta for dinner tonight.Since my shift doesn't end until ten o'clock, I've planned a simple plate of steak, tater tots, and zucchini.
der Brucer shouldn't be having these late-night dinners at this point in his life.
Gentlemen rarely dine before nine.
I feel your pain!! The same thing happened to me about four years ago but I lost everything.
Gentlemen? There aren't any of those around these parts.
It looks like the rains may be done. And about how awful they were - not. They were steady on Saturday, but only a couple of times was it coming down hard. What is forgotten is that LA and especially the Valley cannot handle even a day of rain of any substantial kind without everything getting messed up. But to call it torrential or a horrible storm - uh, no.
Parts of the Southland got more than a foot of rain.Weekend storms that dumped more than a foot of rain on parts of the Southland, prompting warnings of floods and mudslides, were expected to taper off this afternoon….The storm, which forecasters are calling the biggest to hit the region in three years, had dumped 12.7 inches of rain on Opids Camp in the mountains of the Angeles National Forest and 8.6 inches at the San Gabriel Dam as of 7 a.m. today, and about 2.2 inches on downtown Los Angeles as of midnight Sunday, according to Stuart Seto of the National Weather Service in Oxnard.In Orange County, 5.5 inches of rain fell in Silverado Canyon and 3.5 inches in Brea, said Miguel Miller, a weather service forecaster in San Diego.
Virginity, mind, soul - the whole sheebang?der Brucer
BREAKING NEWS: Report: Golden Globes Ceremony Scaled Back to Press Conference der BrucerAnd so begins the WGA Lemmings march to the sea.
Where?
In the gazebo....
Are we STILL on page nine?