I honestly don't think I can do it as a way to describe myself. I could allude to my sense of humor or my appreciation for story or character. But I don't see myself in film characters often.
Office Space, Idiocracy, Hackers (1995), Monty Python and the Holy Grail, and Airheads (1994). If there's a sixth, it'd be Mallrats.
Some of you didn't define your adolescence by pop culture references and it shows.I honestly don't think I can do it as a way to describe myself. I could allude to my sense of humor or my appreciation for story or character. But I don't see myself in film characters often.
I spent 6 years living in Australia (until I was 10) do my experience is a bit abnormal. Still, I grew up with A-team and Voltron and Transformers. I just wouldn't say I am anything like Howling Mad Murdock, though.Some of you didn't define your adolescence by pop culture references and it shows.
You identify as a conversion van!I spent 6 years living in Australia (until I was 10) do my experience is a bit abnormal. Still, I grew up with A-team and Voltron and Transformers. I just wouldn't say I am anything like Howling Mad Murdock, though.
Princess Bride ,Once, Night Trips, Best of the Best, and Secretary.
Office Space, Idiocracy, Hackers (1995), Monty Python and the Holy Grail, and Airheads (1994). If there's a sixth, it'd be Mallrats.
I feel ya. Took extra time to think of movies that represent me rather than just being movies which represent what kind(s) of movies I prefer.(omg, I think I edited this at least 4 times)
This haircut says "I want to see your manager's manager."
There‘s a computer room in my house right now! Three and a half of them, in fact. Four and a half if you count my father-in-law’s laptop on his desk in the workroom as making it a “computer room.”
—Patrick
When I was in high school "wikipedia" was a set of 32 hardback books that took up two book whole shelves of the bookcase and cost $1400 in 1980's dollars.
Here's one to go with that and a few of my ownWhen I was in high school "wikipedia" was a set of 32 hardback books that took up two book whole shelves of the bookcase and cost $1400 in 1980's dollars.
Grog burn hand on hot moving thing gods gave us from the sky.
How about phones that you had to dial by putting your finger into the hole on the dial, spin it around to the stop, wait for it to finish going back before dialing the next number? (rotary phone) We had one of these when I was younger.Phones you couldn't unplug from the wall. They were literally wired to it.
We had a rotary phone until I was 16. Because it was rented from AT&T much like cable boxes are rented from Comcast. But it seemed too cliche to mention itHow about phones that you had to dial by putting your finger into the hole on the dial, spin it around to the stop, wait for it to finish going back before dialing the next number? (rotary phone) We had one of these when I was younger.
My parents told me about when they had a "party line" for their phone - you had to see if one of your neighbors were on the phone before you could use it, you had to listen to how many rings the phone did to be able to know if the call was for you.
How about phones that you had to dial by putting your finger into the hole on the dial
I still have one. It's a beast.it seemed too cliche to mention it
I feel old now. I had a 4 digit number until I was 8, it changed to a 5 digit for the next 7 years and it moved to a full 7. We still haven’t had to go to area code plus dialing in the area. We haven’t had a landline in over 15 years.We had a rotary phone until I was 16. Because it was rented from AT&T much like cable boxes are rented from Comcast. But it seemed too cliche to mention it
When I was a teen, my great grandmother had a 4 digit phone number in her small town.