Food? Does this one really have a subject?
I have $20 of food and drink! Never mind the cash shop. I looked around at Hyun Dai longer than usual, and found things I hadn't seen before. I still haven't gotten a really good look at everything, though. I got lychees in syrup in a can, a lychee drink, green tea powder, chocolate mousse Pocky, a Dars bitter chocolate bar, Nodo ni Sukkiri, Kuro Ame, and rice cakes with red bean filling. I was going to by canned lychees and tea powder online. I didn't know Hyun Dai had them. It's not the only place in town with green tea powder, but it's certainly the least expensive that I've seen. I haven't seen a blog about next week's Threadless shirts, besides the usual t-shirt song blog. Oh, I'm hungry. Noodles or soup? Really, those are my choices. Unless I want cereal, ice cream, or toast with Nutella or lemon curd. Or whatever I can scrape out of the raspberry preserves jar. My mom bought another exercise machine. It's called . . . Leg Magic. Looks fun, if nothing else. I've already got the Gazelle. I can put on my headphones and do that for thirty minutes or so. I've got to put the Leg Magic together later. I'd kind of like one of those pedalling machines that plugs into a video game console, like a ps2, and you have to pedal to keep the system on. That'd be great if my brother hadn't stolen the ps2. Except, you know, I could just do the Gazelle. Or now, the Leg Magic. Or go to the mini-gym. When did BBC America add those closed captioning messages? And why? Did enough people really complain about not being able to understand the shows, and they didn't know how to turn on the captions? My mom and brother don't seem to have the ability to shut up, so I've been using captions for years. I may have also deafened myself slightly with music. Then again, my mother seems to have similar hearing problems, so maybe it's genetic. When I'm watching TV alone, I only turn on the captions if I want to write quotes. I did that on the last day of the Halloween event. I was watching Blackadder I, and I wrote down the quotes I liked and used them during the battle. Ooh, either really late on Friday night or really early on Saturday morning, I was watching the Graham Norton show on BBC America and . . . oh, that woman, one of the women on one of those silly "your clothes are bad, wear this fashionable crap instead" shows, Trini? Aha! "What Not to Wear", says Google. Trini it was. Graham brought out some fake breasts he'd bought at a store, and Trini said they looked like the ones in an episode of Blackadder Goes Forth, but she was wrong! That episode was in Blackadder II! It was called "Beer". Ha! I actually know something for once. 'Cause I have the DVD box set. Yup. Hugh Laurie was in that one. I preferred Tim McInnerny as the stupid sidekick. Of course, if he had continued as Lord Percy, we wouldn't have had Captain Darling in Blackadder Goes Forth. Blackadder II is my favourite season. In the next season of Blackadder, which will probably exist only in my dreams, the cast will be the same as Blackadder II, except maybe with Hugh Laurie as a secondary character or something. My mom wanted to recommend me for one of those shows. A fashion show, I mean. She wants me to be forced to throw out all my jeans and t-shirts and be forced to pick out clothes I'll never wear. Right. One of my mother's patients asked her if she was British. Apparently, my mother's North Carolina accent sounds British to South Carolina ears. I wonder what I sound like. My accent isn't nearly as thick as hers, and I never say "ain't" or "y'all." Unlike my mother, who uses "y'all" when talking to one person. I can accept "y'all" as a contraction of "you all," but that's it. I'm still not going to say it. My aunt, from Maryland, was asked if she was from Australia.
|