This is the only film I've ever seen which got a standing ovation from a cinema audience even though the cast wasn't there. Truly marvellous.
Mar 13 - liked from beanfair's entry
surfette liked this entry
I started reading this nearly 20 years ago. It's so much better than Tolkien. Jordan may not have had the obsessive compulsiveness to invent new languages but his charcters and world make much more sense. No one acts a certain way just because they're a member of an evil race or a good race.
Sep 16 - liked from coreynjoey's entry
This has the warmth of something like The Full Monty combined with football nostalgia, Eric Cantona laughing at himself and a pivotal plot point involving Youtube. One for football fans and closet romantics
Feb 19
dsmfood liked this entryomerfatihkoc - ayemnaotemenayemkantona. hmm.. gülüşünü tasvir edemiyorum kralın. Ken LOACH adamsın!
This British patterie and chocolatier has a limited range but their pralines and truffles are superb
May 8bindu - Yum... too bad this is not here in the Bay Area :)
Post-apocalyptic science fiction with alien but humanoid talking cats and ancient Egyptian demons: there's no way this would be made today. This was (now that I think back on it) extremely high-concept children's television. Did anyone else ever wonder why a society with spaceships was still being run as a hereditary monarchy that made extensive use of swords?
Mar 10 - liked from mayz's entry kyuu - Post-apocalyptic science fiction with alien but humanoid talking cats and ancient Egyptian demons: there's no way this would be made today. This was (now that I think back on it) extremely high-concept children's television. Did anyone else ever ... read more -
FooCamp was the grit. People all over the web who make interesting stuff were the oyster. BarCamp was the pearl that was made when the oyster was irritated by the grit.
It's a conference (usually over a weekend) where everybody's a participant and ...
Mar 29bindu - I have been very curious about barcamp. Something I would love to attend next time.
adewale - There's a BarCamp taking place practically every weekend somewhere in the world. Even just in the US there's a lot going on: http://barcamp.org/#USA
This is classic BBC sci-fi that just happens to be very funny.
Mar 28 - liked from treesandshrubs's entry
I really liked this although I found her academic works such as Self-theories to be crisper, clearer and less prone to the usual tricks of the self-help industry: using examples from famous people, selective quotation, etc
Aug 22 - liked from inspiredwriter's entry
jdubsie liked this entryjdubsie - Such a great idea for future teachers. I read it in my Education class.
I know what you're thinking: what relevance does a choreographer have to my life? Funnily enough it turns out that Tharp writes convincingly, tells engaging stories that leave the applicability of the lessons up to you and somewhere along the way you realise that creativity is the same for all of us. The common nature of creative work (and our common human failings) is more important than the specific details of dancing or programming.
Mar 19 - liked from cindyalvarez's entry Mar 19
macro1970 liked this entrymacro1970 - Douglas Adams takes his Dirk Gently character into a world where the gods are still among us, but feel sadly unloved, abandoned, and unnoticed. A great premise for a satisfying (although somewhat bitter) tale.
This band lies somewhere at the intersection between blues, rock and indie. Their early albums also had something of a gospel influence but their current album, This Is Somewhere, is much closer to indie. It's their best and youngest-sounding album yet.
Mar 7


