Actual comment on a website explaining a payment option: "I would like to get it all for free, otherwise you will not get my business."
Actually, if you get it all for free, we won't have your business either.
Actual comment on a website explaining a payment option: "I would like to get it all for free, otherwise you will not get my business."
Actually, if you get it all for free, we won't have your business either.
From our friends at Universal Uclick:
Mitch Daniels and Petey Otterloop
To comment, please use facebook or twitter (#tomthedancingbug).
Thanks to a loyal member of Team Dancing Bug for sending me Albert Brooks's new book, 2030, off the Wish List. I really appreciate these things.
I'm turning out to be quite the cinematic luddite. I hate 3-D, but I especially despise motion-capture animation.
(Oh, and COPYRIGHT 2011 RUBEN BOLLING on "RUIN-TIN-TIN" ™. All movie reviewers who want to use this have to go through ME!)
A Boing Boing commenter, "pidg," apparently created a Firefox extension to remove the comments of one Percival Dunwoody, Idiot Time Traveler from 1909.
"For the rest of us, there's Dunwoody-No-More®."
We here at Tom the Dancing Bug certainly appreciate the effort. Of course the runner-up is "Applemask," who wrote:
"If you're seriously going to create a Firefox extension to remove Perceval Dunwoody's comments, you might as well make an app that generates the sound of thousands of fabulously-dressed wine-drinking middle class friends in a New York apartment laughing and congratulating you on your cleverness every time you make a post on the Internet."
There seems to be some resentment and puzzlement among commenters over how Mr. Dunwoody always manages to get in the first comment each week. Seems to me that even if you reject the science-fiction explanation, there may be a more reality-based and obvious one.
To comment, please use facebook or twitter (#tomthedancingbug).