It’s just a really great theme song

I am becoming a high-functioning This American Life addict. (That’s right CBC, I’m going south of the border — you’ve hired one too many Jian Ghomeshis, you bastards).

This excerpt from an old episode about television — host Ira Glass talking about his relationship to TV. Specifically? To the OC.

“…it’s personal in the deepest possible way. And um, like I’m a kinda dorky fan when it comes to stuff. My wife is here in the room, so maybe this is bad to be telling this story — every week the OC comes on, my wife Anaheed and I sit on the couch, and when the theme California comes on, we sing along with it. In full voice. You know what I’m saying. Think about what that takes. I’m 47 years old. I’m a grown-ass man. We’re a married couple, y’know, sober. We are sober, singing the theme to a Fox show. And I gotta say — every single week it makes me love my wife, and love TV, and love everything in the world all at once. And last week when the OC went off TV, I, I cried and I’m not ashamed to admit it.”

Cue: California, by Phantom Planet

Whose book are you?

From The Book Quiz:



You’re Prufrock and Other Observations!
by T.S. Eliot
Though you are very short and often overshadowed, your voice is poetic
and lyrical. Dark and brooding, you see the world as a hopeless effort of people trying
to impress other people. Though you make reference to almost everything, you’ve really
heard enough about Michelangelo. You measure out your life with coffee spoons.


Take the Book Quiz
at the Blue Pyramid.

Webcandy

Via Photoshop Disasters (which is also effing awesome), I’m stuck trawling Judge a Book by its Cover. Which is exactly what it sounds like.

This one made me laugh out loud for a good long while:

I want to have a large poster of this book cover. Then, when someone pisses me off, I can just point to it and say, “Hey, deal with THIS!” I don’t know why this cover makes me just want to flash it at people, but it does. Perhaps it’s the dippy belt.

Apparently Lucy Monroe “captures the heart of the genre,” but I’d say she’s capturing something a little lower than the heart.

Ya got a problem with that?! Hey, deal with THIS!