Music & Movies
This forum is for talk about movies, music, and other entertaining things.
Posts 234 - 245 of 2,133
Posts 234 - 245 of 2,133
Butterfly Dream
23 years ago
23 years ago
I think we are more demanding nowadays in regard to entertainment, if old literature and old theatre are any indication.
I do love art museums, and in that case it's usually the older works that are better. Some of what's in those places, you can't even call art.
I do love art museums, and in that case it's usually the older works that are better. Some of what's in those places, you can't even call art.
jbryanc
23 years ago
23 years ago
Corwin--Canadians over a certain age are all going, "know what ya mean!" It's a 'thing' that is always hovering--trapped between the Yanks and the Brits, each of whom thinks we are inferior versions of them. It is less difficult than it used to be to celebrate Canadian talent.
Corwin
23 years ago
23 years ago
Yeah, like I said, things are getting better, but at the same time the powers that be still feel we need to get in American TV personalities to be guest presenters on our award shows. Last time it was Frankie Muniz from Malcolm in the Middle and (of all people) Ronn Moss from which ever soap he's on. I note the latter has just released a CD. Obviously it was some sort of marketing deal.
jbryanc
23 years ago
23 years ago
The Canadian national anthem is probably the only one whose citizens don't know the words to. I defy you to parse that sentence and win. They (the powers that be) changed them (the words to the national anthem) along about the time the Yanks made us go metric and everything stopped making sense.
Kirby, you are the product of a fairly normal imagination.
Kirby, you are the product of a fairly normal imagination.
OnyxFlame
23 years ago
23 years ago
And yet we're still not metric. Go whatever they call non-metric measurement!

Corwin
23 years ago
23 years ago
Its called imperial measurement (because it comes from the Brits I believe, which given that America changed just about everything else about them even vaguely British it kinda surprises me that they kept it).
Australians, surprisingly, know the words to their national anthem quite well because it's sung at lotsa sporting events. Although I reckon at least three quarters of the population either don't know there is a second verse, or would just substitute the words "More beer, more beer, more beer, more beer" until the chorus.
Australians, surprisingly, know the words to their national anthem quite well because it's sung at lotsa sporting events. Although I reckon at least three quarters of the population either don't know there is a second verse, or would just substitute the words "More beer, more beer, more beer, more beer" until the chorus.
jbryanc
23 years ago
23 years ago
In the mid-seventies Ford or maybe Carter decreed that North America would go metric by 19--. Mexico was already there, I believe. Canada dutifully followed along and actually began changing. We put up kilometre posts and changed the gas pumps to litres. Since American and Canadian gallons were different to begin with there was no extra confusion.
Then, those guardians of American democracy, the teamsters, said they weren't gonna change. That was that. Canada was halfway into the metric system and stayed there. There are possibly some advantages: division by 10, for example. But there is no possibility of working out gas mileage because we can no longer buy a gallon of gas nor drive a mile.
Thanks Jer, or was it Jimmy?
Then, those guardians of American democracy, the teamsters, said they weren't gonna change. That was that. Canada was halfway into the metric system and stayed there. There are possibly some advantages: division by 10, for example. But there is no possibility of working out gas mileage because we can no longer buy a gallon of gas nor drive a mile.
Thanks Jer, or was it Jimmy?
» More new posts: Doghead's Cosmic Bar