Post-Debate Wrap-Up

scene from the debate; Mitt Romney is gesturing aggressively at the President, who looks back at him stoically, while Jim Lehrer sits idly by

This image, in which Mitt Romney is gesturing aggressively, and dismissively, at the President, without even looking at him, while the President regards him stoically and Jim Lehrer sits idly by, pretty much sums up last night's debate for me. Romney's a bully; Obama—hamstrung both by racist narratives ready to frame assertiveness as anger and by trying to debate an opponent who will outright lie without hesitation—is feckless; Lehrer is a non-entity, held in thrall by Romney's bombast.

This debate format is garbage even when both candidates are reasonably truthful and the moderator actually moderates. Suffice it to say, last night's "debate" was a farce.

There are plenty of fact-checking pieces about (here is one! and here's a good video!), so I'm not going to duplicate efforts. My assessment is that President Obama was not completely honest, but more honest than most politicians campaigning for election, and that Mitt Romney was remarkably, extraordinarily dishonest. He was a much more brazen liar than I have ever seen in the same venue—neither John McCain nor George W. Bush were so bold. I expected Romney to evade and dissemble; I did not anticipate that virtually nothing out of his mouth would exist in the same galaxy as the truth.

While acknowledging the aforementioned issues that unjustly limited Obama's range of response, the President did miss some pretty significant opportunities last night:

* In a year where reproductive rights are the biggest wedge issue, he did not even mention reproductive rights. That was a failure to reach out to one of his key demographic supports, and it was a failure to make Mitt Romney stand on the stage and confess that he will be no kind of ally at all to women (and men) who want to control their reproduction.

* The President did not mention Bain Capital. He did not mention the 47% speech. He did not mention Romney's 14% tax rate, or his unwillingness to disclose his tax returns beyond last year.

* The President did not re-affirm his personal support for same-sex marriage, nor highlight any of his administration's policies that have expanded LGBTQI rights.

He did some things right, though, too. There was much cheering at Shakes Manor when the President said he likes the term "Obamacare." It is an imperfect health insurance reform law, as far as I'm concerned, but it's 72 million times better than anything Mitt Romney is proposing, and I'm glad to see the President owning it.

I don't think the President's performance was as terrible as lots of other people seem to think. Overall, I thought the biggest loser of the night were US voters, thanks to the garbage format of the debate.

This was the domestic policy debate, and there was no meaningful discussion of environmental policy, climate change, increasing food prices, infrastructure issues, scientific funding, homelessness, hunger, immigration, bankruptcies, foreclosures, the Violence Against Women Act. The only domestic policy that seems to matter now is taxes. Issues like education and healthcare and Social Security only matter insomuch as how they relate to taxation.

And the biggest takeaways for me, the things that I will remember, were two truly terrible things that Mitt Romney said, both of which were almost certainly among his practiced zingers.

1. Romney at minute 21: "...I know that you and your running mate keep saying that [I will not increase taxes on the wealthy] and I know it's a popular thing to say with a lot of people, but it's just not the case. Look, I've got five boys. I'm used to people saying something that's not always true, but just keep on repeating it and ultimately hoping I'll believe it."

Wow. "My sons are liars, so I ain't falling for your shenanigans!"—Father of the Year Mitt Romney, conflating the sitting US President, an African American, with his "boys." That is fucked up on so many levels, but, honestly, no one ought to be more contemptuous of that bullshit than Mitt Romney's own sons.

2. Romney at minute 22: "Mr. President— Mr. President, you're entitled as the president to your own airplane and to your own house, but not to your own facts."

My tweeted response may be the most retweeted thing in my entire Twitter history. So far, it's been RTed 1,150 times.


I don't think it's that my response was super brilliant; it's more just that I responded to it at all. It sort of slid by without much notice, but, for me, that was one of the most illustrative comments of the night. Mitt Romney, son of a governor, corporate raiding multimillionaire, he of the car elevator and boat mansion, who constantly engages in racist "entitlement" rhetoric, turned to President Barack Obama, the African American son of a single mother, on a national stage and condescendingly sneered at him about to what he's "entitled."

And not only that: Mitt Romney, conservative anti-taxer, holder of offshore accounts, he of the 14.1% tax rate, who constantly asserts that taxes need to be lowered so the government doesn't "waste" people's money, wrongly stated that the White House and Air Force One are the property of the US President, not the property of the US People, whose tax dollars bought and maintains that house and that plane.

This is not a man who is fit to hold the office of the presidency of a diverse nation. Send his ass back to a corporate boardroom, where it belongs.

And with that, I am officially debated out. Discuss.

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Open Thread

Hosted by The Gentlemen.

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Presidential Debate Open Thread

photographed image to play off a boxing promotional poster, with President Obama's and Mitt Romney's faces in the background with a US flag, and text reading: 'GOOD GRIEF 2012: OBAMA VS. ROMNEY | Let the debates BEGIN!'

Here we go! Tonight's Subject: Domestic Policy.

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Question of the Day

If you had the chance to ask President Obama and Mitt Romney one question—same question to both of them—what would it be?

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Pre-Debate Thread

photoshopped image of a debate stage; behind one podium is a caricature head of President Obama saying 'You are a garbage nightmare!' and behind the other is a caricature head of Mitt Romney saying 'I know I am, but what are you?!'

There will be an Open Thread for the debate tonight, but in advance of tonight's HOT DEBATE ACTION, I want to share some resources and thoughts...

You will be able to access livestreaming debate coverage at barackobama.com/debate. After the debate, Vice President Joe Biden will be delivering a message at that channel, too.

Speaking of Veep Joe, he (or someone who works for him who is blessed with a thought filter and functional self-censoring mechanism) will be livetweeting the debate: @JoeBiden.

Also on Twitter from Team Obama: @TruthTeam2012 for livetweeting and factchecking; and @Obama2012 for analysis.

As always, I'll be on Twitter, too: @shakestweetz.

Please feel welcome and encouraged to recommend your own or other Twitter feeds, and additional resources, that will be covering, discussing, or providing analysis of the debate.

* * *

Tonight is the first of three debates, and the major media meme is that Romney is the underdog. His team is selling that story hard, in the hopes that underselling him will mean that even the merest appearance of competency will subsequently be declared a win.

But, like everything else that emanates from the Romney campaign, that's total bullshit. Romney was an eminently competent debater in the fully two million Republican Primary Debates (remember those? all two million of them?), and the thought that he's the underdog while he spent a year debating whether he believes in evolution and whether the Republican Party should be allowed to live in the nation's uteri rent-free with his reprehensible compatriots, President Obama was busy running the country and hasn't debated anyone in our silly debate format since John McCain.

iconic image of John McCain with his tongue out while walking behind Barack Obama at a debate in 2008
MEMORIES!

I'm not mentioning this to try to argue that President Obama is an underdog, either—I believe they're on fairly equal footing. I'm mentioning it only to show how the Romney campaign is thoroughly mendacious about literally every. single. thing.

That is, when they're not being totally evasive. Speaking of which: Let's all pay attention to the number of times Mitt Romney deflects, obfuscates, and straight-up refuses to answer questions during the debate tonight! Every time Mitt Romney gives a non-answer, refuses to provide policy details, or changes the subject, let us DRINK! But don't drink alcohol, for the love of Maude. I don't want you to get alcohol poisoning. I LIKE YOU.

I also expect Romney—in addition to avoiding facts like the plague, because if voters knew the actual details of his garbage policies, this election would already be over—to try to use this debate to deliver awesome zingers frame the election as a referendum on President Obama. Which is fair, in the sense that an incumbent president's record should absolutely be part of the assessment when deciding whether zie's earned a second term. But is unfair as soon as Mitt Romney wraps his grabby paws around the idea, because he continually misrepresents President Obama's record.

And then there's this: Mitt Romney would love for this election to be decided exclusively as a referendum on President Obama, because Mitt Romney looks a lot better as "not President Obama" than he does as "Mitt Romney."

ANYWAY! Discuss. I'll close this thread once the Open Thread is posted later tonight.

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Top Five

Here is your topic: Top Five Favorite Poems. Go!

Please feel welcome to share stories about why your Top Five picks are what they are, though a straight-up list is fine, too. Please refrain from negatively auditing other people's lists, because judgment discourages participation.

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Rescued Ducks Swim for the First Time

Below, an amazing video of ducks who were rescued from a hoarding situation experiencing water for the first time at a farm sanctuary. Yay!


Video Description: A badelynge of ducks comes waddling and quacking into a penned-in pond area, followed by humans who are gently herding them. Text Onscreen: "These ducks came from a hoarding case and had never spent time in the water. With clean 'bills' of health we were finally able to integrate them with the rest of our flock." The ducks are herded toward the water but scurry away from its edge. "Getting them into the water was not as easy as you would think!" The ducks charge back and forth, every which way, but they won't venture into the water. Finally, the humans are able to corral them into the pond. The ducks splash into the water then immediately run out. Finally, the humans begin picking them up one by one and putting them into the water. One duck rushes back to land. Another floats on the water's surface, then ducks hir head below the surface. Suddenly, zie begins diving under again and again joyfully. "Hey, that's kind of nice..." And then, as more ducks are put into the pond, the love of the water becomes contagious. All the ducks dive and splash and chatter and swim. They don't look scared anymore. They look happy. Logo: Woodstock Farm Animal Sanctuary.

[H/T to RIT.]

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Tweet of the Day

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"...And I Am In Love With Canada."

Last night Justin Trudeau made it official: he is running for the leadership of the Liberal Party. And he launched his run with a doozy of a speech.

You can see the full speech-- en francais and in English-- here. The full English transcript is available at Trudeau's website, here. En francais, ici.

I would be lying if I didn't say it gave me goosebumps and that I am officially glad he's in the running. So much about this speech seems right to me. The acknowledgement of national accomplishments in terms of the social safety net, the economy, and multiculturalism. The acknowledgement of shortcomings, especially in regards to First Nations Canadians. The invocation of trust and community as basic Canadian values. The determination to restore faith in government as an agent of positive change.

I'd also be lying if I wasn't made profoundly uncomfortable by aspects of this speech. The invocation of the Canadian middle class seemed heavy-handed to me; I understand the Liberal Party's traditional appeal to wide swaths of the middle class, but shutting out working class voters doesn't seem like a win. The attacks on the NDP seemed awkward and nonsensical ("stoking resentment" and "blaming the successful"? Uh, no, Justin, I don't think that's a fair critique of the NDP's positions. Fail.)

Much better, I thought, was the repudiation of Liberal arrogance as the party that "built" Canada. Emphasizing the accomplishments of all Canadians strikes me as a much better way of attracting those same Canadians into the Liberal Party, rather than, explicitly or implicitly, defining the Liberal Party's constituency by class.

Still, it was an absolutely well-done, and genuinely moving speech from someone who, I am prepared to believe, is absolutely genuine in his desire to serve his country. Most of the values he invoked are also me at the heart of what I also love about Canada, and I suspect I am not alone in his audience. It has been a very long time since the Liberals had a leader who could wield genuine empathy and charisma alongside intellect and political skill. It's been a long time since I saw a Liberal who could outline a dream and make me want to come along with him on the journey of achieving it. Put simply, the speech moved and inspired me. I wish Mr. Trudeau luck in re-invigorating the Liberal leadership race.

(Again, full text is available at Justin.ca, Trudeau's website.)

Favourite quotes below:

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Wednesday Blogaround

This blogaround brought to you by waiting rooms.

Recommended Reading:

Jamilah: Why Consumers of Color Should Care About T-Mobile's MetroPCS Merger

Arturo: Fox News Sounds the Dog Whistle One More Time [Content Note: Racism.]

Sara: Fried Chicken for Every Family and Other Myths of Southern Food

Dan: Why Todd Akin Warned of Doctors Who Perform Abortions on Women Who Aren't Even Pregnant

Ari: A Look at Where We Are with the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) and the Courts

Pam: Chick-Fil-A's Cathy: "We Support Biblical Families" [Content Note: Homophobia.]

Ana: Attractive Women [Content Note: Misogyny; body policing.]

Spencer: Not From the Onion: Army Says 'Social Network' Use Is a Sign of Radicalism

Leave your links and recommendations in comments...

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Today in Paul Ryan Is Terrible

In case you've just awoken from a coma and your first priority was to check Shakesville to see what's going on in the political news (excellent priorities, by the way; good for you!), last month, an old tape surfaced (care of Mother Jones) of Mitt Romney saying that 47% of USians are garbage (that's a paraphrase, but a fair one).

Now some similar remarks of Paul Ryan's have been unearthed, although Romney has an even dimmer view (by 17%) of USians than his running mate:

"Seventy percent of Americans want the American dream. They believe in the American idea. Only 30 percent want the welfare state," Ryan said. "Before too long, we could become a society where the net majority of Americans are takers, not makers."
Everything about this is terrible and gross.

The thing I find most extraordinary about this Us vs. Them stuff about which the two shitbirds on the Republican ticket keep yapping is how it ignores the reality that a hell of a lot of USians do not view opportunities to pursue and achieve success and a robust safety net as mutually exclusive objectives. The best case scenario for most of us is lots of opportunity to try, and lots of support if we fail.

But fuckos like Romney and Ryan, with their undiluted privilege and illusions of what "working hard" really means, at least for most of the people in this country, don't understand and/or don't care that "the American Dream" is not achievable exclusively through hard work. Not for everyone. Because not all jobs/skills are valued in the same way.

You can become a millionaire many times over "harvesting" failing companies for profit, but not so much if, say, you work for one of the non-profit charities that people like Romney and Ryan think should replace government welfare programs. Most non-profit workers will work long and hard and diligently for entire careers without ever getting rich—sometimes without healthcare benefits; sometimes without even a livable wage.

In the Romney/Ryan paradigm of Us vs. Them, the Takers vs. the Makers, the concept of "the working poor" does not exist. These dudes—whose lives have been dictated by inherent privilege and family connections, which we're not meant to note while admiring their shiny bootstraps—believe quite firmly, and without seemingly a trace of irony or compunction, that one gets what one deserves in life. And if you don't have enough, it's just because you're not working hard enough.

Now, I don't feel inclined to get into a whole Marxist discussion about the means of production here, but what these insufferable, vainglorious, classist captains of self-aggrandizing bullshit seem never to grasp, or possibly just acknowledge, is that if you want to live in a capitalist society that gives you the opportunity to get nasty rich, then we can't all be wealthy. And if you want to be the kind of person who doesn't pump your own gas, or make your own sandwiches, or clean your own house, or manicure your own fingernails, or drain your own dog's anal glands, or build your own car elevator, then there are going to have to be people who fill all those jobs.

And most of those professional, hard-working people will put in at least 40 hours a week, or more, and even still, many of them won't be given healthcare benefits, and many of them won't earn enough money to feed a family, and many of them won't be able to save as much as they'll need for their retirement.

People who honorably dedicate their time, energy, and talents to jobs that might not pay well are indeed entitled to something—to not work their whole lives only to find themselves poverty-stricken, or hungry, or homeless after one small (or not small) medical crisis. And if we're not going to ensure that every job comes with a livable wage, access to affordable healthcare, and retirement benefits, then we've got to provide a robust and well-funded social safety net.

I don't think that's asking for much, in exchange for a lifetime of providing service to their chosen vocation.

Though I grant it's certainly easier to sneer and scream BOOTSTRAPS! and carelessly assert that people who don't have everything they need are just lazy. Takers. People who don't take personal responsibility, who don't care for their lives. That's so much easier than empathy, and certainly easier than accountability—easier, and less uncomfortable, than reflecting upon how maybe it wasn't just hard work that catapulted you within steps of the Oval Office, that maybe there are people who actually work harder, but still can't afford a bus ticket to D.C.

Funny how the Grand Advocates of Hard Work are always the ones making the easy arguments.

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Daily Dose of Cute

Getting a picture of this very active kitten can be a challenge! Often they end up like this:

I am very interested in that cord swinging from the camera.

But eventually she will go to sleep in the cutest, silliest positions:
Laying like this increases my chances of getting belly rubs by one million percent.

I woke up the other day with her laying like that in the crook of my arm.

She has met all the other household members:
Sam had just looked over as she stretched her two bitty paws out near his eyeballs, LOL.

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In The News

[Content note: racism, gun violence, misogyny, terrorism, homophobia]

All The News In Fits and Spurts:

The Drudge Report released their much-touted October Surprise yesterday. Turns out it was an old video of Barack Obama speaking at Hampton University in Virginia. The video was covered in the last election by everyone (including Fox News where the tape was aired last night) and has been on YouTube since 2007. It also turns out that President Obama might be black, which concerns some conservative pundits.

It's debate night! I hope there are lots of zingers! If not, you can always get some Zingers here.

The Los Angeles City Council voted to repeal the ban on medical marijuana dispensaries it approved just a few months ago.

Unknown assailants killed at least 25 people at a polytechnic school in northeastern Nigeria.

Iran's currency plummeted at least 17 percent in trading on Monday. US officials said the decline was evidence of the success of the international sanctions over Iran's nuclear program.

Brad Staats, a Republican running for Congress in Tennessee, posted a picture of a semi-automatic pistol on his Facebook page. Underneath it he wrote: "Welcome to Tennessee Mr. Obama." Good lord.

Speaking of Republicans: Todd Akin has been really terrible for a very long time.

Know who's not terrible, but in fact totally fucking awesome? Jessica Luther of scATX.com. Check out this great poster featuring a quote from her.

Legal victory: Transgender woman wins insurance coverage for sex reassignment surgery. Woot!

Citing security concerns, Serbia's Gay Pride parade planned for this weekend in Belgrade has been canceled as have all activities related to it.

Attention Fans of Lorries and Crisps: Downtown Abbey is on out on DVD and Blu-Ray this week. Cheerio!

HIV treatment is now officially free for all who need it in England, including undocumented migrants and non-United Kingdom citizens. Hail Britannia!

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Two-Minute Nostalgia Sublime



Stiff Little Fingers: "Suspect Device"

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Blog Note

I have another doctor's appointment this morning, and it's going to take quite awhile. So posting will be light from me for most of the day. If I'm not back sooner, I do want to note that I'll be live-blogging the debate tonight, so get ready for some HOT DEBATE ACTION!

Please remember that when I'm not around, we're down one moderator, so take extra care in commenting, and be patient with and respectful of the other mods who will be picking up my slack.

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Today in Fat Hatred—And Fighting Back

[Content Note: Fat hatred; bullying.]

I have gotten more emails about the below video than any other thing in eight years. It's a video of Jennifer Livingston, a news anchor for WKBT in Wisconsin, reading on-air a letter from a man who wrote to tell her she is fat and thus a bad role model, and then responding. So, by overwhelming demand...

I want to take a moment to address a situation that has become a talking point in this community over the past weekend especially on Facebook that centers around me.

On Friday I received the following email from a Lacross man with the subject line "Community Responsibility" and it reads as follows: "Hi Jennifer: It's unusual that I see your morning show, but I did so for a very short time today. I was surprised indeed to witness that your physical condition hasn't improved for many years. Surely you don't consider yourself a suitable example for this community's young people, girls in particular. Obesity is one of the worst choices a person can make and one of the most dangerous habits to maintain. I leave you this note hoping that you'll reconsider your responsibility as a local public personality to present and promote a healthy lifestyle."

Now, those of us in the media, we get a healthy dose of critiques from our viewers throughout the year, and we realize it comes with having a job in the public eye. But this email was more than that. While I tried my best to laugh off this very hurtful attack on my appearance, my colleagues could not do the same, especially my husband—our six and ten anchor Mike Thompson.

Mike posted this email on his WKBT Facebook page and what happened next has been truly inspiring. Hundreds and hundreds of people have taken the time out of their day to not only lift my spirits but take a stand that attacks like this are not okay—and we're going to have more on that in just a second—but first, the truth is, I am overweight. You could call me fat and yes, even obese, on a doctor's chart. But to the person who wrote me that letter, do you think I don't know that? That your cruel words are pointing out something that I don't see? You don't know me. You are not a friend of mine. You are not a part of my family and you have admitted that you don't watch this show so you know nothing about me but what you see on the outside and I am much more than a number on a scale.

And here is where I want all of us to learn something from this. If you didn't already know, October is National Anti-Bullying Month, and this is a problem that is growing every day in our schools and on the internet. It is a major issue in the lives of young people today and as the mother of three young girls it scares me to death.

Now I am a grown women and luckily for me I have a very thick skin—literally, as that email pointed out—and otherwise. And that man's words mean nothing to me. But what really angers me is there are children who don't know better. Who get emails, as critical as the one I received or in many cases even worse, each and every day. The internet has become a weapon. Our schools have become a battleground. And this behavior is learned. It is passed down from people like the man who wrote me that email.

If you are at home and you are talking about the fat newslady—guess what? Your children are probably going to go to school and call someone fat. We need to teach our children to be kind, not critical, and we need to do that by example. So many of you have come to my defense over the past four days I am literally overwhelmed by your words.

To my colleagues and my friends from today and years ago, my family, my amazing husband, and so many of you out there that I will probably never have the opportunity to meet, I will never be able to thank you enough for your words of support. And we are taking a stand against this bully. We are better than that email. We are better than the bullies that would try to take us down. And I leave you with this. To all of the children out there who feel lost, who are struggling with your weight, with the color of your skin, your sexual preference, your disability, even the acne on your face. Listen to me right now. Do not let your self-worth be defined by bullies. Learn from my experience that the cruel words of one are nothing compared to the shouts of many.

We'll be right back.
Rock the fuck on, sister.

I don't guess that Livingston imagined when she did this extraordinary thing that it would go viral on the internet. It has probably meant exponential support, and exponential criticism. I ardently hope the former is so loud and so enthusiastic and so reverberating that the latter merely looks like the contemptible, joyless moans of the chronically cruel that it is.

* * *

My thanks to each and every person who sent the link. Transcript c/o Michael Leuchtenburg at Feministing.

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Open Thread

Hosted by The Boogieman fought by The Real Ghostbusters.

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Question of the Day

What is the best treat you've ever given yourself?

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American Football, Your Name It Is Strange.

More Flula. Since I first showed this to Iain last week, he's watched it like five times, and we laugh and laugh every single time.

Flula Borg, a young, thin, white, German man, sits in front of his computer with a set of headphones askance on his head. He speaks directly into the camera.

I do not understand this football name in America. You know, in Germany, we have fußballfußball is football, yeah?—but this is, for you, soccer. [confused face] I don't understand. Fußball— Football— What is you using for your sport, in "soccer"? It's feet! Okay, so we call it this; we're calling it this—feet-ball!—let us use the feet and kicking the ball!

But with you, football— [exasperated face] How—how many of kicks is there in the football game? Six kicks? We have six kicks in like eight seconds! [uses fingers to indicate kicks in quick succession] Bop bop bop bop bop tor!

You, it is like [looks exhausted] kick run run run hold. Throw. Time out. Everybody— Oh, referee! Problems! [mimes refs looking into a hooded reply monitor] Hood! We look in the hood! What is the problem? What's their thing? [mimes throwing] Throwing some flags. More looking in the hood, looking in the hood. Commercials! Ba-da-bop! Chevrolet! Beep-beep! [throws up his hands in resignation] Oh, and then, you know, twenty-nine minute later: Oh, a kick! Oh, one kick!

Where's the foot?! This is it. You have like nine kicks-off! Where's the foot? But you are calling it foot—football. [shrugs contemptuously] Why? Call it something else! Carryball. Or carry-throw-ball-and-sometimes-foot-kick-ball. I don't know. Just something. I say change it. Change it. CHANGE IT! To something that is more accurate—accurate—having some accurate things. [nods sagely; pause] Or: I Throw the Flag or What.
Oh god. He is sooooo funny. It's not easy to be funny in a language other than your primary one, no less to have great comic timing. I remember the first time I made a pun in German that made my German teacher laugh—that was a big deal. And I remember my friend Miller writing about the first time she made a group of people laugh telling a joke in Portuguese while living in Brazil. And Flula is just non-stop funny all the freaking time. That's an enviable talent.

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Top Five

Here is your topic: Top Five Favorite Animal Species With Which You've Interacted. Go!

Note: Interaction doesn't necessarily have to mean physical touch. Having a buffalo approach your car window at Yellowstone, for example, also counts.

Please feel welcome to share stories about why your Top Five picks are what they are, though a straight-up list is fine, too. Please refrain from negatively auditing other people's lists, because judgment discourages participation.

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