Originally posted by Serial_Apologist
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Phrases/words that set your teeth on edge.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostWhich means breaking off in the middle of speech, apparently.
Thank you for another new word to add to my lexicon - useful for describing jazz improvisers when they run out of ideas, and clam up![/QUOTE]
...or for the work of certain minimalist composer when they (as a certain pianist said of a well known one such) run out of a lack of ideas (rather as I more recently said of a certain British Prime Minister that all too often he just says the first thing that doesn't come into his head)...
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Originally posted by P. G. Tipps View PostBut you just have ... so you certainly could!
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post... I like your (intentional?) aposiopesisIt isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostPut it down to an inability to continue, I being under no obligation to pay the trifling sum myself, and elect not to do so. I only once witnessed the programme concerned and that was under duress and in the face of my vigorous protests.
I wonder why what I first mistakenly thought to be canned hysteria but which I soon discovered to be the unreal thing has become so essential an element of the content of SCD and progammes like it and which I'd have thought would make already threadbare, formulaic and largely empty-headed end products even more obviously so, but then what do I know? I suppose that at least it pays some reasonably handsome session fees to the musicians involved, but that single pssible redeeming factor does not a watchable programme make (for me, anyway). As for its apparent habitual closing injunction (to whom?) to "keep dancing", it must seems to be a rather an odd "request" to those who have never done it in the first place and have no intention of starting...
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostIndeed so, albeit usually if not always in a "fill in the blanks" invitation manner
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostI wonder why what I first mistakenly thought to be canned hysteria but which I soon discovered to be the unreal thing has become so essential an element of the content of SCD and progammes like it and which I'd have thought would make already threadbare, formulaic and largely empty-headed end products even more obviously so, but then what do I know? I suppose that at least it pays some reasonably handsome session fees to the musicians involved, but that single pssible redeeming factor does not a watchable programme make (for me, anyway). As for its apparent habitual closing injunction (to whom?) to "keep dancing", it must seems to be a rather an odd "request" to those who have never done it in the first place and have no intention of starting...
Originally posted by ahinton View PostOK, I admit that I wouldn't subject myself to two consecutive seconds of the programme if you paid me (unless the sum offered was sufficiently large!),
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostIsn't that what 'every little helps' does: invite you to fill in the blanks & therefore answer your question - "But "every little" what "helps "who or what with what and how and why?"
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostYou seemto know a lot about the programme, given that
Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostSo how much were you paid (& who by? Certainly not me)
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If someone claims not to want to watch "2 consecutive seconds" of a programme, but then professes to know enough about it to be able to pontificate on its quality and quote the presenters' 'sign off' line (& know that they use it frequently, if not in every programme) then I think that they are bending things a little?
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostIf someone claims not to want to watch "2 consecutive seconds" of a programme, but then professes to know enough about it to be able to pontificate on its quality and quote the presenters' 'sign off' line (& know that they use it frequently, if not in every programme) then I think that they are bending things a little?
I have not "pontificated" on anything to do with it, actually and have in any case been less concerned with its overall quality than with its title, as should be clear from the comments that I have made about it. The fact that I dislike such as I've seen of the series, whilst true, is really neither here nor there except as a personal opinion.
Got it now?
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Strictly Come Dancing?
It reminds me of when I was a very wee boy (in more senses than one) and our family received a Xmas gift from a Great Aunt. It was an LP of the old musical Salad Days and when my mother played one song in particular from the disc it demonstrated once again to my siblings and myself just how silly and excruciatingly embarrassing adult folk can sometimes become.
Certainly a painful and salutary lesson on what might well lay in store for us in the adult world in the future ... and, 100% true to that very young nightmarish vision, along comes the BBC with SCD.
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Originally posted by P. G. Tipps View PostStrictly Come Dancing?
It reminds me of when I was a very wee boy (in more senses than one) and our family received a Xmas gift from a Great Aunt. It was an LP of the old musical Salad Days and when my mother played one song in particular from the disc it demonstrated once again to my siblings and myself just how silly and excruciatingly embarrassing adult folk can sometimes become.
Certainly a painful and salutary lesson on what might well lay in store for us in the adult world in the future ... and, 100% true to that very young nightmarish vision, along comes the BBC with SCD.
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