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naturalplastic
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11 Aug 2019, 6:16 pm

IsabellaLinton wrote:
My best male friend is obsessed with MASH like a special interest. He has the box set and watches it hundreds of times a year. I usually zone out if I'm there. A couple of the episodes are quite touching, though.

Is Doc autistic? I didn't realise. I haven't seen BTTF in years.

Skirt 4.

same question re: Doc


I love MASH. Prefer the TV series to the movie. Though I do admit that watching reruns of it today can a little like watching Masterpiece Theater. Young folks cant stand the slow pacing or something. And even I have to switch gears mentally to get back into the Seventies mode to watch it. But it is a good show with some great episodes.

I also did not know that Doc was supposed to be an aspie.

If he is an aspie then ...that's fine with me! :D



kraftiekortie
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11 Aug 2019, 6:18 pm

I always thought Hawkeye was a self-righteous schmuck. I like both colonels and most of the other characters.

Anybody watch “Steptoe and Son?”



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11 Aug 2019, 6:19 pm

I've never seen Star Trek either. Call me televisionally-delayed.

Prom, somehow I only saw the first row of skirts. I change my answer to anything but 1 and 2.

Who is Jim Cagney?


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kraftiekortie
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11 Aug 2019, 6:22 pm

I don’t like Camden Town. I do like Hampstead Heath.

Doc is very much an Aspie type.....primarily because he’s socially awkward and seems to have sensory issues. My favorite guy in the movie, though.

Do you wonder why Camden Town is so crowded?

James Cagney was a movie star for a long time. He was best known for his gangster characters in the 1930s.



naturalplastic
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11 Aug 2019, 6:22 pm

IsabellaLinton wrote:
I've never seen Star Trek either. Call me televisionally-delayed.

Prom, somehow I only saw the first row of skirts. I change my answer to anything but 1 and 2.

Who is Jim Cagney?


There is a Jim Carrey.

And there was a Jimmy Cagney (you dirty rat!! !!).

But I don't know Jim Cagney either.



Prometheus18
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11 Aug 2019, 6:26 pm

IsabellaLinton wrote:
I've never seen Star Trek either. Call me televisionally-delayed.

Prom, somehow I only saw the first row of skirts. I change my answer to anything but 1 and 2.

Who is Jim Cagney?

Televisually? :P

I actually don't mind 1 and 2; 2 is too tight and immodest, but the length's fine. Shorter skirts are perfectly alright, but they should really be A-Line and fairly loose fitting. In fact, #2 as it is in the photo would be fine, if the lady also had dark tights on and if the skirt itself were darker, but it's a bit too much flesh for me, as it is. Needless to say, if I met a woman my age who dressed only in skirts/dresses >=3, I'd propose :lol:

James Cagney is an actor whose best work, in my view, was Angels with Dirty Faces (1938), my mother's all-time favourite film.

Do you like Ravel?



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11 Aug 2019, 6:29 pm

“White Rabbit,” by Jefferson Airplane, is based on Ravel’s “Bolero.” I like him.

How about Debussy?



naturalplastic
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11 Aug 2019, 6:33 pm

Prometheus18 wrote:
IsabellaLinton wrote:
I've never seen Star Trek either. Call me televisionally-delayed.

Prom, somehow I only saw the first row of skirts. I change my answer to anything but 1 and 2.

Who is Jim Cagney?

Televisually? :P

I actually don't mind 1 and 2; 2 is too tight and immodest, but the length's fine. Shorter skirts are perfectly alright, but they should really be A-Line and fairly loose fitting. In fact, #2 as it is in the photo would be fine, if the lady also had dark tights on and if the skirt itself were darker, but it's a bit too much flesh for me, as it is. Needless to say, if I met a woman my age who dressed only in skirts/dresses >=3, I'd propose :lol:

James Cagney is an actor whose best work, in my view, was Angels with Dirty Faces (1938), my mother's all-time favourite film.

Do you like Ravel?

Who doesn't love JimMY Cagney. He was a Yankee Doodle Dandy!

I love "Pictures at an Exhibition" which was written by Mussorgsky, but was transcribed by Ravel for orchestra. And who doesn't like Bolero? Stanley Jordan did a great jazz-rock fusion version of Bolero.



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11 Aug 2019, 6:38 pm

Angels with Dirty Faces became the Bowery Boys.

Would you like to walk across the Brooklyn Bridge?



Prometheus18
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11 Aug 2019, 6:39 pm

Yes to Brooklyn Bridge.

I like Ravel's Piano Concerto. The second movement is one of the saddest pieces of music I know. So full of regret and bitterness.

I like Debussy. His Children's Corner, arranged for orchestra, is delightfully innocent.

Do you like Mahler?



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11 Aug 2019, 6:40 pm

I'd love to! I've always wanted to go to NYC.

I don't know Mahler.

Do you like taking people sightseeing?


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kraftiekortie
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11 Aug 2019, 6:41 pm

Mahler has rich, but sad, music.

Would you be glad if a Major League Baseball club was established in London?

Sightseeing? Sometimes.



Prometheus18
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11 Aug 2019, 6:49 pm

I'd hate to spend any great length of time taking another person sightseeing. Travel, like all truly and lastingly satisfying sources of pleasure, is a solitary one. When I'm in London, though, I do like showing off my knowledge of the capital to foreign (chiefly American) tourists, especially if they're pretty young ladies :lol: :lol: :lol:

kraftiekortie wrote:
Mahler has rich, but sad, music.

Would you be glad if a Major League Baseball club was established in London?

Sightseeing? Sometimes.

I'd love to see a baseball team in London - and an American football team.

Have you ever read de Quincey?



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11 Aug 2019, 6:55 pm

He’s elegantly decadent.

How about “Moll Flanders”?



Prometheus18
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11 Aug 2019, 6:58 pm

kraftiekortie wrote:
He’s elegantly decadent.

How about “Moll Flanders”?

Never read it.

How about Swinburne?



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11 Aug 2019, 7:00 pm

I know the name. Never read him. Isn’t he supposed to be decadent, too?

Do you believe William Blake was the First Romantic?