The Rent Welcome Wagon — Page 124
#3077
Posted: 12/7/04 at 11:53pm
Go do your work! Does that help Beka?
"The weight of this sad time we must obey, Speak what we feel, not what we ought to say. The oldest hath borne most; we that are young Shall never see so much, nor live so long"-Edgar in King Lear
#3078
Posted: 12/8/04 at 12:00am
I have to do a fifteen minute presentation next week about schizophrenia in a class and have to write the paper for it which is due monday.
do you like honors though aside from the presenation?
do you like honors though aside from the presenation?
"The weight of this sad time we must obey, Speak what we feel, not what we ought to say. The oldest hath borne most; we that are young Shall never see so much, nor live so long"-Edgar in King Lear
#3079
Posted: 12/8/04 at 12:00am
I wish I could speak French. What's funny is that I took a semester and a half of French in college, and I only know how to count to ten. Good money put to waste. Not only that, but my last namre is French and no one can ever pronunce it right.
#3080
Posted: 12/8/04 at 12:02am
I took french from kindergarden through half of sixth grade and didn't learn much except how to say hello and how are you?. Pretty sad. Now I take Spanish. Somewhat happier.
"The weight of this sad time we must obey, Speak what we feel, not what we ought to say. The oldest hath borne most; we that are young Shall never see so much, nor live so long"-Edgar in King Lear
#3081
Posted: 12/8/04 at 12:03am
Lol. That's funny.
"The weight of this sad time we must obey, Speak what we feel, not what we ought to say. The oldest hath borne most; we that are young Shall never see so much, nor live so long"-Edgar in King Lear
#3082
Posted: 12/8/04 at 12:07am
Don't know. Mine's German too.
"The weight of this sad time we must obey, Speak what we feel, not what we ought to say. The oldest hath borne most; we that are young Shall never see so much, nor live so long"-Edgar in King Lear
#3083
Posted: 12/9/04 at 3:58am
i'm here. i love how i managed to JUST miss the fun.
oh well, at least I got some studying done. which is a good thing, since i have a test in 7 hours.
oh well, at least I got some studying done. which is a good thing, since i have a test in 7 hours.
AKA Idina Pashmina
Type_A_Tiff: There's nothing hard about her. Broadway_star_tomorrow: Yeah. Her arteries.
Type_A_Tiff: There's nothing hard about her. Broadway_star_tomorrow: Yeah. Her arteries.
#3084
Posted: 12/10/04 at 10:24pm
Most of the stores around here have a very poor selection of cast recordings, and what they do have is put in with the movie soundtracks.
#3087
Posted: 12/11/04 at 1:51am
Sorry about the PMs I sent to people about posting. Guess I figured it out on my own. And I'd like to say "hi" to Fredi. It's a pleasure talking to you, and everyone else here. BTW - a friend and I went to see RENT tonight.
#3088
Posted: 12/11/04 at 1:53am
I have "Seasons of Love" stuck in my head. And "Out Tonight". Krystal Washington gave a great performance. Though, I'm trying to figure out how I'd film "Out Tonight".
#3089
Posted: 12/11/04 at 1:58am
I have an essay and a screenplay to write. I don't know which one to work on right now.
#3090
Posted: 12/11/04 at 2:00am
the "chicken dance" is a wedding fiasco. I'd rather watch Elaine from SEINFELD do her wild, non-rythmical dance.
#3091
Posted: 12/11/04 at 2:03am
This is probably random and off topic, but I was reading the past posts here and I think I read that Fredi likes Hitchcock movies. Which one of his is your favorite, Fredi?
#3093
Posted: 12/11/04 at 2:09am
My previous post was prematurely posted. Nice choices Fredi. I go to film school and I was suprised by how many of the students have heard about REAR WINDOW. Ask someone back home younger than 45 and they just look at you like you're insane.
#3094
Posted: 12/11/04 at 2:11am
PSYCHO didn't scare me until I researched how the Shower Scene was made and the catharsis it had on the audience in 1960. Then it freaked me out. I did manage to have a five minute convo with the late great Janet Leigh about that scene a few years ago.
#3095
Posted: 12/11/04 at 2:13am
Just a film school in NYC. It's great. Hitchcock has had the most influence on me.
#3096
Posted: 12/11/04 at 2:17am
I agree about how desensitized young people are today. Is it necessary to see a knife gutting twenty-eight people in five minutes of a movie to scare them? That's not scary. THE SIXTH SENSE was scary because it was subtle. And, though it wasn't really scary, I think Tim Burton's SLEEPY HOLLOW is just plain creepy. Such a great movie. Does anyone else think Burton should adapt the Sherlock Holmes novel THE HOUND OF THE BASKERVILLE'S into a film? I tried adapting it a while ago but was sidetracked with an original screenplay I wanted to write.
#3097
Posted: 12/11/04 at 2:21am
Oh yeah. Possibly the most popular entertainment of today would be dodging the prongs on the sides of opened umbrellas while walking up ny streets in a downpour.
#3099
Posted: 12/11/04 at 2:22am
Another totally random thought but did anyone other than me think M. Night Shyamalan's THE VILLAGE was NOT garbage?
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