From: owner-fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org (fegmaniax-digest) To: fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org Subject: fegmaniax-digest V10 #116 Reply-To: fegmaniax@smoe.org Sender: owner-fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org Errors-To: owner-fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org Precedence: bulk fegmaniax-digest Tuesday, April 10 2001 Volume 10 : Number 116 Today's Subjects: ----------------- Re: Movie? [Glen Uber ] Re: fegmaniax-digest V10 #115 ["Natalie Jacobs" ] RE: Movie? ["Poole, R. Edward" ] A treasure from a friend of Thoth ["Kototh" ] Re: T-shirt lust/request ["brian nupp" ] starfish [GSS ] Re: Movie? ["J. Brown" ] Moving Pictures (no Rush content) [Glen Uber ] [none] [Melissa Higuchi ] RE: Movie? ["Cynthia Peterson" ] RE: Movie? [Aaron Mandel ] Re: starfish ["JH3" ] Feg casting call ["Poole, R. Edward" ] Re: your mail [Glen Uber ] the gq boys ["Andrew D. Simchik" ] Thomas Dolby debate [Carole Reichstein ] Re: Thomas Dolby debate [Viv Lyon ] Re: Thomas Dolby debate ["Jason R. Thornton" ] RE: Thomas Dolby debate ["Thomas, Ferris" ] Re: Thomas Dolby debate [Tom Clark ] Re: Thomas Dolby debate [Bayard ] Re: Thomas Dolby debate [Glen Uber ] Stop me before I lurk again! [Fred Hamilton ] RE: Thomas Dolby debate ["Poole, R. Edward" ] Re: Thomas Dolby debate ["Aaron L." ] Re: Thomas Dolby debate ["Jason R. Thornton" ] RE: Thomas Dolby debate [Eb ] Re: Thomas Dolby debate [Tom Clark ] RE: Thomas Dolby debate [Glen Uber ] Re: Movie? ["victorian squid" ] Re: Thomas Dolby debate [Viv Lyon ] Re: Movie? [Tom Clark ] Re: Thomas Dolby debate [Tom Clark ] RE: Thomas Dolby debate [Terrence Marks ] Re: Movie? [Viv Lyon ] ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2001 10:27:01 -0700 (PDT) From: Glen Uber Subject: Re: Movie? On Tue, 10 Apr 2001, Mike Swedene wrote: >So like a schmo, I went out last night and caught the >British film "Blow Dry." As I was the only one in the >theater I got to thinking, what if Robyn and the crew >ok'd a feature film on the SB reunion tour? Who would >play who? My vote goes to Alan Rickman for the part >of Robyn. Any other thoughts on this? He just needs >to get the eye blinking thing down and I think he >would be perfect. I think that most of us would agree that Dana Carvey would play Kimberley. Cheers! - -g- ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2001 10:44:11 -0700 From: "Natalie Jacobs" Subject: Re: fegmaniax-digest V10 #115 Susan spake: >So did you kinda think about what it would be like to live with a man >with >his wardrobe? I actually knew nothing of his wardrobe when I was in high school. My friend Marc dissuaded me from marriage by commenting on how annoying it would be to live with a guy who was constantly spewing monologues about fish and insects at all hours of the day. These days, I think it would be kind of neat. >I'm trying to figure out how to get around the monobrow myself. I like it, personally. But I'm weird. > >You can't buy unhemmed pants, > >I respectfully disagree. If you're talking about the legs being > >unfinished, looking "cut off", that's a somewhat common practice with > >more expensive mens' clothing. I respectfully stand corrected. I know little about men's clothing. However, I still like the idea that someone made them for him. >For the record he thinks the bright pants are awful also but that >they >might look better on me than Robyn. Yes, they would look much better on a smaller person. Probably not on me, though, due to the plumpness of my legs. >Oh, that was alright, but the white sneakers/dark pants need to go. Definitely, definitely. Melissa sayeth: >we could start another thread of official merch we'd like to see >1. action figures >2. bigger girl t-shirts >3. crab themed housewares I don't have any housewares like that, but I used to have a stuffed lobster (a toy) whom I named Homerus, the Latin word for lobster. (I was a very precocious child.) I played with Homerus all the time, until one of his claws fell off. This may have been a precursor of my fondness for Robyn. >4. a little plastic forms book with old and new promo photos, >swap heads >and bodies Paper dolls! Yes, all the little feg girls will be able to take Robyn and Matthew's pants off! Whee! n. _________________________________________________________________ Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2001 10:52:10 -0700 From: "Mark Gloster" Subject: in defense of clown pants I realize that I may be nobody's future husband material and may have to lie on a cold cement floor in a pool of my own vomit posed in the fetal position if the mind control mojo ever wears off of my sweety, but: I gravitate toward playing bizzarre, ridiculous, AND deLuxe guitars and wearing stupid and irritating clothing. Some of it may be to create a relative comfort margin where those looking at me are less comfortable than I, but I think bright colors are cool. Why is it that guys can't wear wild colors and women can? As far as Robyn's pants go, I thought they were a bit muted in color, though widely varied. Greg Shell had the best shirt. Happies, - -Markg ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2001 13:47:41 -0400 From: "Poole, R. Edward" Subject: RE: Movie? On Tue, 10 Apr 2001, Mike Swedene wrote: >My vote goes to Alan Rickman for the part >of Robyn. Glen Uber added: >I think that most of us would agree that Dana Carvey would play Kimberley. To which I say: I agree with the above, plus... Robbie Coltrane as Morris Windsor; and, in a special bout of stunt casting, featuring his hitherto unexplored british accent, it's Jerry "the Beav" Mathers as Matthew Seligman. - -ed ============================================================================This e-mail message and any attached files are confidential and are intended solely for the use of the addressee(s) named above. This communication may contain material protected by attorney-client, work product, or other privileges. If you are not the intended recipient or person responsible for delivering this confidential communication to the intended recipient, you have received this communication in error, and any review, use, dissemination, forwarding, printing, copying, or other distribution of this e-mail message and any attached files is strictly prohibited. If you have received this confidential communication in error, please notify the sender immediately by reply e-mail message and permanently delete the original message. To reply to our email administrator directly, send an email to postmaster@dsmo.com Dickstein Shapiro Morin & Oshinsky LLP http://www.legalinnovators.com ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2001 10:56:19 -0700 From: "Kototh" Subject: A treasure from a friend of Thoth Calling all fegs, as fortune has it, I have an extra ticket to the knitting factory show tonight and am offering it up, as the show is sold out. I did catch the post by John (simon50@aol.com) and I did email him about an hour ago, and will wait a little bit to hear back from him, but if I do not hear back from him by 12:00 PST, I will offer it up. Let me know, please, also, when you email me back, (and please do so off the list) give me a phone number to contact you, because I will not be able to get to email after about 3:00 PST today. Failing all this, I will be at the knitting factory early, between 6 and 6:30, and wearing a bright red t-shirt (with Robyn Hitchcock and the Egyptians "Respect" Finger coming out of the clouds, on the shirt) so look for me and tell me you want the ticket. Price of ticket: well Anubis wanted of course, your soul, Osiris thought that would be a bad idea, and Sebek agreed, saying it was not really a sellers market for souls right now. Horus blinked his ever watchful eye, and demanded that I only charge what was paid. So $ 23.50 is the price of the ticket. Thoth has advised payment make take the form of gold, alabaster or cash, if need be. Greg kototh@flash.net "One more animal, no one thought would get away. Hear the crunching sound, of the Leopard an her prey." - Robyn Hitchcock, 1986 ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2001 14:03:20 -0400 From: "brian nupp" Subject: Re: T-shirt lust/request >>they should do black snake diamond rock! This is exactly what I would've written on the balloon in Detroit, if I hadn't giving it to a really hot girl standing behind me yelling "I got the hots!" Nuppy _________________________________________________________________ Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2001 13:43:19 -0500 (CDT) From: GSS Subject: starfish Oregon has remained fairly groovey, lots of places to see and they still have wolverines, though I again failed to spot one. The classic rock stations play Rush and the no sales tax is great, at least for visitors. The drivers are the same as in all other parts of the US, some are cool and some ain't. A great time was had in Oregon this year and I hope to return soon. It was just dandy meeting all you folks and I have to thank Mark Gloster and Jiv/Veme for their hospitality and Natalie for the beautiful Thoth. And now the question. Yesterday at a local convenience store I purchased a Sade CD, Lovers Rock. It is a pirated copy. What should I do? gss ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2001 12:43:27 -0700 (PDT) From: "J. Brown" Subject: Re: Movie? On Tue, 10 Apr 2001, Glen Uber wrote: > On Tue, 10 Apr 2001, Mike Swedene wrote: > > >So like a schmo, I went out last night and caught the > >British film "Blow Dry." As I was the only one in the > >theater I got to thinking, what if Robyn and the crew > >ok'd a feature film on the SB reunion tour? Who would > >play who? My vote goes to Alan Rickman for the part > >of Robyn. Any other thoughts on this? He just needs > >to get the eye blinking thing down and I think he > >would be perfect. > > I think that most of us would agree that Dana Carvey would play Kimberley. No he must be played by a Muppet! Jason Wilson Brown - University of Washington - Seattle, WA "Don't talk to me about U2, man. I've been into fruit for years." -Robyn Hitchcock ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2001 13:00:23 -0700 (PDT) From: Glen Uber Subject: Moving Pictures (no Rush content) It's too bad Peter Cook isn't with us anymore. He would be a perfect casting choice. I always thought Robyn resembled him quite closely. If this were 1967, I'd say you cast Peter Cook as Robyn. How about Dudley Moore as Morris? Julie Andrews! - -g- ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2001 20:06:51 -0000 From: Melissa Higuchi Subject: [none] But who would play the fegs? \\\"Poole, R. Edward\\\" said: > On Tue, 10 Apr 2001, Mike Swedene wrote: > > >My vote goes to Alan Rickman for the part > >of Robyn. > > Glen Uber added: > > >I think that most of us would agree that Dana Carvey would play Kimberley. > > To which I say: I agree with the above, plus... Robbie Coltrane as Morris > Windsor; and, in a special bout of stunt casting, featuring his hitherto > unexplored british accent, it\\\'s Jerry \\\"the Beav\\\" Mathers as Matthew > Seligman. > > -ed ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2001 13:07:45 -0700 From: "Cynthia Peterson" Subject: RE: Movie? You could have Scott McCaughey played by a muppet, though Animal would have to switch instruments: http://www.muppets.com/profiles/animal.htm http://www.seattleweekly.com/features/0111/music-learmonth.shtml (The Young Fresh Fellows ARE going to be in our movie, aren't they??) Cynthia p.s. Maybe we should rethink the concept, and do the whole thing as a Muppet adventure film... - -----Original Message----- > > I think that most of us would agree that Dana Carvey would play Kimberley. No he must be played by a Muppet! ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2001 16:27:12 -0400 (EDT) From: Aaron Mandel Subject: RE: Movie? On Tue, 10 Apr 2001, Poole, R. Edward wrote: > it's Jerry "the Beav" Mathers as Matthew Seligman. actually, Matthew would have to be played by sometime feg Eugene Mirman. i can't find any photos of him online (well, except the disturbing one at www.eugenemirman.com), but in person the likeness is remarkable. a ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2001 15:33:52 -0500 From: "JH3" Subject: Re: starfish >And now the question. Yesterday at a local convenience store I >purchased a Sade CD, Lovers Rock. It is a pirated copy. What >should I do? I'd say go ahead and do whatever you want - as long as you DON'T post about it to a mailing list that J. Brelin subscribes to. But -- oops! You've already done that! JH3 ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2001 16:37:06 -0400 From: "Poole, R. Edward" Subject: Feg casting call Mel H. (not to be confused with Mel "Scary" B) opened the following can of worms: >But who would play the fegs? ummm... ok, I'll bite. Ferris: Brendan Fraser lj: natasha lyonne Woj: Jack Black (hey hey, don't get uptight... JB 40 lbs ago, alright?) Bayard: Patrick Warburton (aka Puddy from Seinfeld). note: I gotta be nice to the guy, since he's making me cds from the DC show as we speak. So who can cast Eddie Tews? Quail??? - -ed ============================================================================This e-mail message and any attached files are confidential and are intended solely for the use of the addressee(s) named above. This communication may contain material protected by attorney-client, work product, or other privileges. If you are not the intended recipient or person responsible for delivering this confidential communication to the intended recipient, you have received this communication in error, and any review, use, dissemination, forwarding, printing, copying, or other distribution of this e-mail message and any attached files is strictly prohibited. If you have received this confidential communication in error, please notify the sender immediately by reply e-mail message and permanently delete the original message. To reply to our email administrator directly, send an email to postmaster@dsmo.com Dickstein Shapiro Morin & Oshinsky LLP http://www.legalinnovators.com ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2001 13:52:18 -0700 (PDT) From: Glen Uber Subject: Re: your mail On Tue, 10 Apr 2001, Melissa Higuchi wrote: >But who would play the fegs? In the role of LJ: Allyson Hannigan. Edward Norton might be able to pull off the role of Jay Hedblade. And you know, Kurt from the YFF is a dead ringer for Terry Gilliam. Cheers! - -g- )+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+( ) ) Glen Uber // uberg at sonic dot net // Santa Rosa, California ) )+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+( ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2001 13:55:18 -0700 From: "Andrew D. Simchik" Subject: the gq boys >From: "Natalie Jacobs" >A brief discourse upon THOSE pants. I have to say that they looked positively au courant after the Young Fresh Fellows' (intentionally, I'm sure) eye-blistering ensembles. >p.s. Irrelevant star-fucking: I saw Benicio del Toro in a cafe on Saturday. Yum! >From: Jeffrey_Rose@eri.eisai.com > >Anyone know (or can anyone speculate) why "I Got The Hots" is the one >great song >from UM NOT being played on the tour? I could envision some free-form >verbiage >or twisted guitar jams on that one. Too bad. I've said this before, but I've never considered that a great song from UM. It and Positive Vibrations are pleasant to listen to but don't have the same excitement that the rest of the album (which is being played) has. Obviously tastes differ -- maybe the Boys share my opinion on this matter and not yours. I always thought that particular song would kind of plod live, though Vibrations would really rock and the harmonies would be great. Drew - -- Andrew D. Simchik, drew at stormgreen dot com http://www.stormgreen.com/ ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2001 14:00:34 -0700 (PDT) From: Carole Reichstein Subject: Thomas Dolby debate I just happened to mention that Thomas Dolby played with the Soft Boys at the San Francisco show (my coworkers are fascinated with my Robyn Hitchcock hobby). A big debate just came up: My friend Jay says that "Dolby Stereo" was named after Thomas "She Blinded Me with Science" Dolby. I say, "no way! Thomas Dolby is too young!" And is "Dolby" really his real last name? Or was "Dolby stereo" invented by a relative of the singer? Someone, please help me and my friend Jay settle this. Thanks! (Tom--did you get any SB pins for me? Does Jeme have them? If you forgot, don't worry...I may be able to get them thru the Museum of RH...) xxx Carole ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2001 14:15:42 -0700 (PDT) From: Viv Lyon Subject: Re: Thomas Dolby debate On Tue, 10 Apr 2001, Carole Reichstein wrote: > (Tom--did you get any SB pins for me? Does Jeme have them? If you forgot, > don't worry...I may be able to get them thru the Museum of RH...) Colleen bought 'em, and I got 'em. Come and get 'em. Ciao! Vivien ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2001 14:17:39 -0700 From: "Jason R. Thornton" Subject: Re: Thomas Dolby debate At 02:00 PM 4/10/01 -0700, Carole Reichstein wrote: >My friend Jay says that "Dolby Stereo" was named after Thomas "She Blinded >Me with Science" Dolby. I think it was the other way around. Thomas Dolby was "named" after the technology. In fact, wasn't he threatened with a lawsuit over this once? >I say, "no way! Thomas Dolby is too young!" > >And is "Dolby" really his real last name? Nope, it's Thomas Morgan Robertson. >Or was "Dolby stereo" invented by a relative of the singer? I don't believe this to be true, but I'm not completely sure. - --Jason PS: Moby isn't a real whale. "Only the few know the sweetness of the twisted apples." - Sherwood Anderson ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2001 17:16:54 -0400 From: "Thomas, Ferris" Subject: RE: Thomas Dolby debate - -----Original Message----- From: Carole Reichstein ...snip... My friend Jay says that "Dolby Stereo" was named after Thomas "She Blinded Me with Science" Dolby. I say, "no way! Thomas Dolby is too young!" ...snip... - -----Original Message----- 'No way' is right. The fellow who invented the noise reduction's name was Dolby, but Ray, not Thomas (www.dolby.com). Thomas' real name was/is Thomas Dolby Robertson. ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2001 14:19:08 -0700 From: Tom Clark Subject: Re: Thomas Dolby debate on 4/10/01 2:00 PM, Carole Reichstein at carole@technical.powells.com wrote: > I just happened to mention that Thomas Dolby played with the Soft Boys at > the San Francisco show (my coworkers are fascinated with my Robyn > Hitchcock hobby). A big debate just came up: > > My friend Jay says that "Dolby Stereo" was named after Thomas "She Blinded > Me with Science" Dolby. > Dolby Labs has been around for a way long time. As Mark explained to us as we were trapped in a moving vehicle with him this past weekend, Thomas' school chums gave him the Dolby nickname because he was such a geek. Mark also explained that Dolby Labs tried to sue him for using their name. Having dealt with them while at Apple, I can tell you they are quite aggressively litigious. > > (Tom--did you get any SB pins for me? Does Jeme have them? If you forgot, > don't worry...I may be able to get them thru the Museum of RH...) > Coleen got them in SF and immediately gave them to Viv for delivery. - -tc P.s. Who's guitar is in the left channel on Kingdom of Love? ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2001 17:26:40 -0400 (EDT) From: Bayard Subject: Re: Thomas Dolby debate i found this at dolby.com: Dolby Laboratories founded in London SW6 by Ray M. Dolby, American physicist, with staff of four. (May 1965) I don't know if Thomas is related to Ray, or if he stole the name for his own purposes. Moby is related to Herman Melville and I went to school with Matt Moog, son of the synthesizer guy. On Tue, 10 Apr 2001, Jason R. Thornton wrote: > At 02:00 PM 4/10/01 -0700, Carole Reichstein wrote: > > >My friend Jay says that "Dolby Stereo" was named after Thomas "She Blinded > >Me with Science" Dolby. > > I think it was the other way around. Thomas Dolby was "named" after the > technology. In fact, wasn't he threatened with a lawsuit over this once? > > >I say, "no way! Thomas Dolby is too young!" > > > >And is "Dolby" really his real last name? > > Nope, it's Thomas Morgan Robertson. > > >Or was "Dolby stereo" invented by a relative of the singer? > > I don't believe this to be true, but I'm not completely sure. > > --Jason > > PS: Moby isn't a real whale. > > > "Only the few know the sweetness of the twisted apples." > - Sherwood Anderson ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2001 14:43:14 -0700 (PDT) From: Glen Uber Subject: Re: Thomas Dolby debate On Tue, 10 Apr 2001, Tom Clark wrote: >P.s. Who's guitar is in the left channel on Kingdom of Love? I believe Robyn is mixed left and Kimberley is mixed right throughout the album. Cheers! - -g- )+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+( ) ) Glen Uber // uberg at sonic dot net // Santa Rosa, California ) )+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+( ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 09 Apr 2001 22:09:40 -0700 From: Fred Hamilton Subject: Stop me before I lurk again! Hi Fegs, I really enjoyed meeting the 2 dozen or so of you I met at the Thai place before the show, and of course the show was fantastic. You know, I'm also a big Television fan (they've currently reunited in Europe, BTW), so I was super excited when they played the Great American Music hall around 92. I got tickets for both shows. The first show was AWESOME. The second show was...the...exact..same. I think they changed one song in their set. By itself, the second show would have been great, but after the first show I might have well just bought the DVD. Which really made me appreciate this YFF/SB tour that much more. I was lucky enough to see them in NYC and Boston before this, and every show was really different, every show was full of surprises, and I DON'T KNOW WHAT I'M GOING TO DO WITHOUT MY WEEKLY LIVE YFF/SB FIX! Sorry about the panic attack. Cheers! - -Fred the Lurker ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2001 17:36:03 -0400 From: "Poole, R. Edward" Subject: RE: Thomas Dolby debate >Moby is related to Herman Melville and I went to school with Matt Moog, >son of the synthesizer guy. So, you *must* know for sure: is it "mooog" (like the cow-sound) or "moag" (like toad, except with "m" and "g"). ============================================================================This e-mail message and any attached files are confidential and are intended solely for the use of the addressee(s) named above. This communication may contain material protected by attorney-client, work product, or other privileges. If you are not the intended recipient or person responsible for delivering this confidential communication to the intended recipient, you have received this communication in error, and any review, use, dissemination, forwarding, printing, copying, or other distribution of this e-mail message and any attached files is strictly prohibited. If you have received this confidential communication in error, please notify the sender immediately by reply e-mail message and permanently delete the original message. To reply to our email administrator directly, send an email to postmaster@dsmo.com Dickstein Shapiro Morin & Oshinsky LLP http://www.legalinnovators.com ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2001 16:50:34 -0500 From: "Aaron L." Subject: Re: Thomas Dolby debate Dolby's interest in music arose through his interest in computers, electronics and synthesizers. The son of a British archeologist, Thomas Dolby (b. Thomas Morgan Robertson, October 14, 1958) originally attended college to study meteorology, but he was soon side-tracked by electronics, specifically musical equipment. He began building his own synthesizers when he was 18 years old. Around the same time, he began to learn how to play guitar and piano, as well as how to program computers. Eventually, his schoolmates gave him the nickname of "Dolby," which was the name for a noise-reduction technology for audiotapes; he would eventually take the nickname as a stage name. - -- from the All-Music Guide (www.allmusic.com) * C. Aaron Lowe mailto:aaron@hollowstreets.net http://aaron.hollowstreets.net ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2001 15:03:19 -0700 From: "Jason R. Thornton" Subject: Re: Thomas Dolby debate At 05:26 PM 4/10/01 -0400, Bayard wrote: >Moby is related to Herman Melville and I went to school with Matt Moog, >son of the synthesizer guy. Bob Moog. Ever see the Theremin documentary? Interviews with Moog regarding theremin technology took up a significant amount of screen time. Interviews with Brian Wilson were also used, which were highly entertaining, but hardly as informative. - --Jason "Only the few know the sweetness of the twisted apples." - Sherwood Anderson ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2001 15:15:09 -0700 From: Eb Subject: RE: Thomas Dolby debate >So, you *must* know for sure: is it "mooog" (like the cow-sound) or "moag" >(like toad, except with "m" and "g"). It is absolutely "MOAG." Another pet peeve of mine. Five hours 'til showtime? Eb, who has always envisioned himself being portrayed by Judge Reinhold, to be honest ;) ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2001 15:27:58 -0700 From: Tom Clark Subject: Re: Thomas Dolby debate on 4/10/01 2:43 PM, Glen Uber at uberg@sonic.net wrote: > On Tue, 10 Apr 2001, Tom Clark wrote: > >> P.s. Who's guitar is in the left channel on Kingdom of Love? > > I believe Robyn is mixed left and Kimberley is mixed right throughout the > album. That makes sense now. Believe it or not I've only listened to UM with headphones a few times. on 4/10/01 3:15 PM, Eb at ElBroome@earthlink.net wrote: > > Eb, who has always envisioned himself being portrayed by Judge Reinhold, to > be honest ;) > So just to make things interesting, Phoebe Cates must play Vivien! Fegs always fun, - -tc ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2001 15:31:51 -0700 (PDT) From: Glen Uber Subject: RE: Thomas Dolby debate On Tue, 10 Apr 2001, Poole, R. Edward wrote: >So, you *must* know for sure: is it "mooog" (like the cow-sound) or "moag" >(like toad, except with "m" and "g"). The correct pronunciation is the latter. The former seems to be the most common, however. Cheers! - -g- )+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+( ) ) Glen Uber // uberg at sonic dot net // Santa Rosa, California ) )+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+()+( ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2001 15:40:02 -0700 From: "victorian squid" Subject: Re: Movie? Glen: >> I think that most of us would agree that Dana Carvey would play Kimberley. Jason: >No he must be played by a Muppet! Me: Michael McKean (better known to some as David St. Hubbins in 'Spinal Tap"). Also I suggest Cate Blanchett for Viv. And I don't know if Liz Phair has done any acting, but she does look strikingly like Carole Reichstein. Objections? Love on ya, Susan Join 18 million Eudora users by signing up for a free Eudora Web-Mail account at http://www.eudoramail.com ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2001 15:49:36 -0700 (PDT) From: Viv Lyon Subject: Re: Thomas Dolby debate On Tue, 10 Apr 2001, Tom Clark wrote: > So just to make things interesting, Phoebe Cates must play Vivien! Always the agent provocateur, eh Tom? Well, I've always envisioned myself as being played by Adrian Edmondson, to be honest. Vivien ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2001 15:51:10 -0700 From: Tom Clark Subject: Re: Movie? on 4/10/01 3:40 PM, victorian squid at v.squid@eudoramail.com wrote: > Also I suggest Cate Blanchett for Viv. And I don't know if Liz Phair has done > any acting, but she does look strikingly like Carole Reichstein. Objections? Liz Phair acting: , about one-third the way in. Black snake diamond rock, - -tc ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2001 15:54:48 -0700 From: Tom Clark Subject: Re: Thomas Dolby debate on 4/10/01 3:49 PM, Viv Lyon at vivlyon@bitmine.net wrote: > On Tue, 10 Apr 2001, Tom Clark wrote: > >> So just to make things interesting, Phoebe Cates must play Vivien! > > Always the agent provocateur, eh Tom? Well, I've always envisioned myself > as being played by Adrian Edmondson, to be honest. Hmmm, I can't remember him ever doing a pool scene... Tulips blossom in a sock, - -tc ...but he does stuff loads and loads of paper down the toilet! I'm going to shut up now. ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2001 19:04:20 -0400 (EDT) From: Terrence Marks Subject: RE: Thomas Dolby debate On Tue, 10 Apr 2001, Eb wrote: > >So, you *must* know for sure: is it "mooog" (like the cow-sound) or "moag" > >(like toad, except with "m" and "g"). > > It is absolutely "MOAG." Another pet peeve of mine. Yeah...the rogue is in vogue who pronounces it "moag". Problem with that is nobody has the slightest idea what you're talking about. ("Oh, you mean moog, right?" Terrence Marks Unlike Minerva (a comic strip) http://www.unlikeminerva.com The Nice (an organization for comic strips) http://nice.purrsia.com normal@grove.ufl.edu ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2001 16:11:36 -0700 (PDT) From: Viv Lyon Subject: Re: Movie? On Tue, 10 Apr 2001, victorian squid wrote: > Also I suggest Cate Blanchett for Viv. And I don't know if Liz Phair > has done any acting, but she does look strikingly like Carole > Reichstein. Objections? I object on both counts! First of all, I should be so lucky as to look like someone who's playing Galadriel, and secondly (and I know Carole hates to hear this old chesnut one more time) but Carole obviously should be played by Joan Cusack. Vivien ------------------------------ End of fegmaniax-digest V10 #116 ********************************