Monday, March 28, 2005

Required Reading: Betty Bowers reviews the Terri Schiavo Show

Today's reading assignment: another scathingly brilliant look at our current cultural climate by America's Best Christian. Click link below. Please.

  • Mrs. Betty Bowers on Real Reality TV
  • Tuesday, March 22, 2005

    Good Old Right-Wing Nut-Job Bashing, Woohoo!

    I'm rediscovering a number of things now that I have my evenings free again, and among the most rewarding: THE DAILY SHOW! I had completely forgotten to even record it for the past couple months. Fine liberal wiener I am.

    Saturday, March 12, 2005

    Also...

    Since there is now something to actually read on here, I feel compelled to change the color scheme, so as not to torture any potential readers with that dizzying white on black stuff.

    So, here's some whining...

    I was thinking that one thing I could do with this blog is complain about stupid language usage, especially as it is now time to grade final papers...and since, in general, I like to complain about such things...

    So, this afternoon I was watching a how-to-play-acoustic-bass video, trying not to bleed too heavily whilst holding down those big-as-your-arm strings, and I hear the guy say something about the HEIGHTH of the string above the fingerboard...and I'm thinking, please oh please don't say heighth, because it isn't really a word, and just encourages people to say it wrong, grumblegrumblegrumble... A little later, just to make myself feel better/smart/holier-than-him, I looked it up on the Merriam-Webster online dictionary, where you can also hear pronunciations of the words. I noticed there were 2 little speaker icons, meaning 2 pronunciations to be heard, and was ever so depressed to hear the second of the two sound like something entirely too close to HEIGHTH. This is not OK. Is this an example of the language officially changing because of common, yet WRONG, usage? Or has that always (whatever that means) been an acceptable variant? Oh dear, I so hope not. My world has been shaken. Not stirred.