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11.21.09 - 247 (Y2)
247/365 - November 21, 2009 (Y2)
247.365
November 21, 2009
Halifax, NS
Nikon D60
11.21.09 - Cats and Kittens
I want happy fluffy things today. Like cats and kittens.

Little picspam and more )
Game yesterday with [info]ovielove was loads of fun, even if the game itself was kinda a big fail. There was some serious assholery in our section too, but that happens, I suppose. I just felt bad for the little girls sitting in front of me who looks petrified. Still, the company was good, and watching Brooks pitch someone into the bench kinda made my life. Nicky getting mad and dehelmeted and Greener randomly punching some dude in the face were also excellent.

There was more coolness, though, and for that I'm using...

Day 06 → Whatever tickles your fancy

Rest of the meme! )

What tickles my fancy today is a little picspam. I bought my own Christmas gift while I was at the game, and I'm so in love with it it's stupid. I got a game-used Brooks Laich stick. *snuggles it* It's glorious, and I want to share. This is it:

Photobucket

More pictures of my baby, complete with boob references! )

I also got talked into buying an signed ornament for charity. It was one of those deals where you buy it, then open it up to see who signed it, like the Puck Surprise days. Anyway, it was going to charity, and I love those sorts of things, so I bought one...

See who I got! )
WINONA, MINN. -- Christina and Jesse Fladmark were married on Flag Day last year at the band shell on the Mississippi River. They chose the spot largely because Jesse, a soldier, draws strength from the nearby war memorial.

WINONA, MINN. -- Christina and Jesse Fladmark were married on Flag Day last year at the band shell on the Mississippi River. They chose the spot largely because Jesse, a soldier, draws strength from the nearby war memorial.

11.21.09 - Tylenol Recall
Just annoying how they bury the information on the website. But here it is, if you use tylenol products on your children. (and, who doesn't?) I sure didn't know about this.


http://www.tylenol.com/page.jhtml?id=tylenol/news/subpchildinfantnews.inc
I have updated Purple Rain, Chapter 10 can now be found here and here!

Hope everyone is having a great weekend! xx Dulce
11.21.09 - Fic; Typecasting
Title: Typecasting
Author: crucifictorius
Characters: Barney with hints of Robin
Rating: PG
Timeline: Post-break-up
Summary: Lately though, like so many other things in his life; this has changed.
11.22.09(no subject)

Imagine that you have a time machine. Which deceased musician would you most want to travel back in time to watch in live performance?

Submitted By [info]crazyprotein


View 693 Answers


Uhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh. Okay, I'll give you one guess.

Actually, I've seen him perform live in concert twice, so maybe this doesn't count. EXCEPT IF I COULD TRAVEL BACK IN TIME ETC, I WOULD BE HIS GROUPIE, OK.



DUCK LIPS FOREVER.

I'd also see The Beatles live. When I was in London, I went on a Beatles tour and when we came to 3 Savile Row in Westminster, I stared up at the building and thought, fuck, all those people who got to witness London coming to a standstill with the Beatles performing their very last ever concert up there on the rooftop were so. fucking. lucky. It was also apparently their longest ever concert, too - it ran for 42 minutes. All their previous concerts ran for no longer than half an hour. This January 30th will be 41 years since that concert happened.
If you've noticed a slightly more hysterical tone in the fund requests we all get from charities this time of year, there's a reason: Donors, hit by factors as varied as the Madoff scandal and the general economic downturn, have cut back while the charities are facing greater demand for their...

Seth Goldman co-founded Honest Tea in 1998 with Barry Nalebuff, his professor at the Yale School of Management. The Bethesda-based company has been recognized for its growth and business practices .


Questions for Joel Waldfogel, a professor at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. His book, "Scroogenomics: Why You Shouldn't Buy Presents for the Holidays," was published in October by Princeton University Press.

Back when I was a newspaper editor in Rochester, N.Y., an investment club invited me to speak about small-company stocks, a subject I occasionally wrote about. Before the session, I talked with club members to learn more about how they picked stocks. They explained that they focused on a single...

11.21.09(no subject)
Guys, I need some input.

I am making Cuddy, House and Wilson animated mood themes (like, a mood theme for each character). I have started making caps for all three. Butttt. Because there are so many mood themes (137 or something) and there's heaps of footage to choose from, maybe you guys could help out by telling me the kinds of scenes you'd like to see in the mood themes? Meaning, leave me a comment (or several) suggesting scenes to use (telling me which episodes they are from/the ep numbers would be a help, too, because i r a dumb when it comes to remembering which episodes scenes come from). If I end up using your suggestions, you will of course be credited for helping me out. ♥

Suggest as many as you want, as many times as you want, for as many of the three characters as you want. I've never made a mood theme before, so any suggestions would be a big help! Comments are screened.

Thanks, bbs. ♥

List of all the moods under the cut for reference )
BEIJING-- A powerful gas explosion at a coal mine in northeastern China has killed at least 42 miners, with 66 more trapped about a third of a mile underground, according to state news media. The accident again highlighted China's notoriously bad record on coal mine accidents, which kill thousand...


While the Justice Department did not award any direct grants to ACORN between 2002 and 2009, it did fund one group that funneled money to the controversial advocacy group, an inspector general reported Friday in response to a congressional inquiry.


Attention homo sapiens:

There's enough novel for me to tentatively start posting snippets. Now, I appreciate that a large percentage of you won't be interested and that's absolutely fine. But if you want to be on the filter for excerpts, let me know in the poll, okay?




Poll #1488295 BOOK
Open to: All, detailed results viewable to: None, participants: 26

Do you want to be on the filter for reading my novel in bits and pieces?

Yes
18 (69.2%)

Go fuck yourself
0 (0.0%)

Yes, but I also just wanted to tell you to go fuck yourself
7 (26.9%)

I can't read
1 (3.8%)



And just because:

WASHINGTON – In this week’s address, President Barack Obama described the progress made during his trip to Asia, and detailed steps the administration is taking to spur job creation.  The President explained how increasing exports to Asia Pacific nations can create hundreds of thousands of jobs in America and described the upcoming jobs forum which will host CEOs, labor unions, economists, and nonprofits.

The full audio of the address is HERE. The video can be viewed online at www.whitehouse.gov.

Remarks of President Barack Obama
Weekly Address
Saturday, November 21, 2009

Hi.  I’m recording this message from Seoul, South Korea, as I finish up my first presidential trip to Asia.  As we emerge from the worst recession in generations, there is nothing more important than to do everything we can to get our economy moving again and put Americans back to work, and I will go anywhere to pursue that goal. 

That’s one of the main reasons I took this trip.  Asia is a region where we now buy more goods and do more trade with than any other place in the world – commerce that supports millions of jobs back home.  It’s also a place where the risk of a nuclear arms race threatens our security, and where extremists plan attacks on America’s soil.  And since this region includes some of the fastest-growing nations, there can be no solution to the challenge of climate change without the cooperation of the Asia Pacific.

With this in mind, I traveled to Asia to open a new era of American engagement.  We made progress with China and Russia in sending a unified message to Iran and North Korea that they must live up to their international obligations and either forsake nuclear weapons or face the consequences.  As the two largest consumers and producers of energy, we developed a host of new clean energy initiatives with China, and our two nations agreed to work toward a successful outcome at the upcoming climate summit in Copenhagen – an outcome that leads to immediate action to reduce carbon pollution.  And I spoke to young men and women at a town hall in Shanghai and across the internet about certain values that we in America believe are universal:  the freedom of worship and speech; the right to access information and choose one’s own leaders. 

But above all, I spoke with leaders in every nation I visited about what we can do to sustain this economic recovery and bring back jobs and prosperity for our people – a task I will continue to focus on relentlessly in the weeks and months ahead. 

This recession has taught us that we can’t return to a situation where America’s economic growth is fueled by consumers who take on more and more debt.  In order to keep growing, we need to spend less, save more, and get our federal deficit under control.  We also need to place a greater emphasis on exports that we can build, produce, and sell to other nations – exports that can help create new jobs at home and raise living standards throughout the world. 

For example, if we can increase our exports to Asia Pacific nations by just 5%, we can increase the number of American jobs supported by these exports by hundreds of thousands.  This is already happening with businesses like American Superconductor Corporation, an energy technology startup based in Massachusetts that’s been providing wind power and smart grid systems to countries like China, Korea, and India.  By doing so, it’s added more than 100 jobs over the last few years. 

Increasing our exports is one way to create new jobs and new prosperity.  But as we emerge from a recession that has left millions without work, we have an obligation to consider every additional, responsible step we can take to encourage and accelerate job creation in this country. That’s why I’ve announced that in the next few weeks, we’ll be holding a forum at the White House on jobs and economic growth. I want to hear from CEOs and small business owners, economists and financial experts, as well as representatives from labor unions and nonprofit groups, about what they think we can do to spur hiring and get this economy moving again.

It is important that we do not make any ill-considered decisions – even with the best of intentions – particularly at a time when our resources are so limited.  But it is just as important that we are open to any demonstrably good idea to supplement the steps we’ve already taken to put America back to work.  That’s what I hope to achieve in this forum.  

Still, there is no forum or policy that can bring all the jobs we’ve lost overnight.  I wish there were, because so many Americans – friends, neighbors, family members – are desperately looking for work.  But even though it will take time, I can promise you this:  we are moving in the right direction; that the steps we are taking are helping; and I will not let up until businesses start hiring again, unemployed Americans start working again, and we rebuild this economy stronger and more prosperous than it was before.  That has been the focus of our efforts these past ten months – and it will continue to be our focus in the months and years to come. 

Thanks. 

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