Zarys wrote:Seriously, why everyone older than 30 hate you ? personally it's more mutual avoiding since we aren't the same generation. (so not many thing to speak about or ocassions to meeting)
I'm just referring to the fact that if someone says they've never watched any of the old episodes, they will generally talk down to you just a joke, is all
And Hisao probably spends so much time with Mutou because he's Mutou's personal cockgobbler. Hey, blame the fanfiction.
Khalego's Fanfic Tips How to dispose of an unwanted character: "As much as it pains me, Lilly will just have to be trampled to death at a blind-deaf pep rally."
Khalego wrote:And Hisao probably spends so much time with Mutou because he's Mutou's personal cockgobbler.
Why wouldn't Mutou eat his own roosters?
Someone told him they were fowl once, now he won't touch them
Oddball wrote:
metalangel wrote:I am so sick of hearing about Doctor Fucking Who. Especially from neophytes who've jumped into the godawful reboot (Eccleston onwards) and think it's the greatest thing ever. Every transit shelter here has a poster about the new Doctor. Every other dating profile, Arsebook post and meme seems to involve it. I've seen people with TARDIS TATTOOS for god's sake.
All the wonderful things British television has produced over the years, and this is what the beginning of the 21st century will be known for.
/rant
I'm with you on modern Dr. Who.
Now old Doctor Who where it was faily obvious that filmed on a budget of maybe five bucks an episode and had Doctors that were more interested in being weird and quirky than being good looking and sexy? that was gold.
I'm not old enough to have even watched any of them first time round, but they've recently been showing repeats on the William Hartnell/Patrick Troughton ones, and although the sets are interesting and the monsters are kinda hilarious, they're great fun and still quite dark on occasion.
For the record though, I did like the Eccleston series. Sorry.
LordMarluxia wrote:Now I always thought that the japanese system seems a lot more efficent in this regard.
Students crawling all over the school, losing their stuff in the classrooms, then they don't know in which one their were just half an hour ago. It's such a pain in the ass.
Even though the Portuguese school system is similar (in terms of years and stuff) I really hoped I just had to stay in a single classroom all the time. It was hard making up escapes routes from almost every classroom in the school.
The downside is that it means all students must take the same set of classes as everyone else in the room. Doable in a system with few-to-no electives. In the US, we tend to have a lot of those, so, student stampede each period it is!
LordMarluxia wrote:Now I always thought that the japanese system seems a lot more efficent in this regard.
Students crawling all over the school, losing their stuff in the classrooms, then they don't know in which one their were just half an hour ago. It's such a pain in the ass.
Even though the Portuguese school system is similar (in terms of years and stuff) I really hoped I just had to stay in a single classroom all the time. It was hard making up escapes routes from almost every classroom in the school.
The downside is that it means all students must take the same set of classes as everyone else in the room. Doable in a system with few-to-no electives. In the US, we tend to have a lot of those, so, student stampede each period it is!
I once handled timetabling for a school of about 2000+ students. We had elective blocks (with stampedes) as well as fixed blocks (stay in form room). Some teachers had homerooms for subjects like sciences (in the labs) or languages. The timetabling process always took at least two months.
Post-Yamaku, what happens? After The Dream is a mosaic that follows everyone to the (sometimes) bitter end. Main Index (Complete)—Shizune/Lilly/Emi/Hanako/Rin/Misha + Miki + Natsume
Secondary Arcs: Rika/Mutou/Akira • Hideaki | Others (WIP): Straw—A Dream of Suzu • Sakura—The Kenji Saga. "Much has been lost, and there is much left to lose." — Tim Powers, The Drawing of the Dark (1979)
LordMarluxia wrote:Now I always thought that the japanese system seems a lot more efficent in this regard.
Students crawling all over the school, losing their stuff in the classrooms, then they don't know in which one their were just half an hour ago. It's such a pain in the ass.
Even though the Portuguese school system is similar (in terms of years and stuff) I really hoped I just had to stay in a single classroom all the time. It was hard making up escapes routes from almost every classroom in the school.
The downside is that it means all students must take the same set of classes as everyone else in the room. Doable in a system with few-to-no electives. In the US, we tend to have a lot of those, so, student stampede each period it is!
Well... only in Highschool (and by highschool I mean 10th, 11th and 12th grade) we get elective subjects. From 5th grade to 9th grade we all have the exact same subjects (bar special occasions where we go to the lab).
Even from 10th grade onwards, we only have 4 electives depending on our chosen area.
Reading: Kafka on the Shore - Haruki Murakami; Fractured - Karin Slaughter
Playing: Sniper Ghost Warrior 2; Far Cry 3; Dragon's Crown
Cat: "Where are you going?" Alice: "Which way should I go?"
Cat: "That depends on where you are going." Alice: "I don’t know."
Cat: "Then it doesn’t matter which way you go."