The Sillys Journey into the Heart of Dorkness (new 12/15 - p. 23 criminy crackerswog)

We can NOT have this masterpiece off to the nether-regions of the TR menu.

We can wait for the next literary work of art...patience is a virtue I am working on! :hourglass
 
HaleyB said:
I have it now. Working on it.

I will simply point out that H. now has Sections 6 & 7. But she is doing some Girl Scout training thing. So she is busy. Or at least that's her current excuse.
 
Trip Report Section 6 - Wherein all that remains to be said of MGM is said.

Once upon a time, not so long ago, really quite recently, there was a trip report segment which began with these words, "Once upon a time, not so long ago, really quite recently, there was a trip report segment which began with these words, 'Once upon a time, not so long ago, really quite recently, there was a trip report segment which began with the words,' " Fortunately for us all the author was well aware of the dangers of recursive storytelling and managed to break out of the loop before the whole universe was consumed by the infinitely regressive story and then the cosmos was destroyed in a stack overflow. This should stand as a lesson to us all on the wonders and dangers of recursion in self-referential storytelling.

A brief note on why this segment is in a foreign language, eh.
In the spirit of international harmony and goodwill, we have decided to post this segment of the report translated into a foreign language. Seeing as there are a lot of Canadians on the board, that's the language we will use, eh. So a big hello to our eskimo friends to the north. We will be using the revised standard Canadian convention, such that we will use "eh" as a sentence terminator, but will follow it with a period instead of a question mark, eh. Also, there is a Canadian convention/law/whatever that on any document that contains English, there must also be French. Thus, bonjour! For our American friends, if you have difficulty reading this report, there are several free automated translation tools available on the internet, such as AltaVista's Babel Fish, and I assume there's one that can translate Canadian to American, eh.

A note on an archaic medical theory, eh.
The ancient Greeks had relatively sophisticated medical knowledge to some degree, but in some respects their views were very limited. These views, good and bad, by and large were adopted by Rome and later Medieval Europe, and things only really started to change with the Renaissance when learning from the Arabic world (which was much more medically sophisticated than contemporary Medieval Europe), and the new learning from other sources spurred on changes into views, and more inquiry into medical science. One place where the Greek views were a bit iffy is the theory of the Four Humours (Humors for our American readers).

In the past I gave a list of rules for things that were humourous. The Four Humors is not actually referring to things that are funny, but to bodily fluids. Okay, body fluids can be funny. They often are, outside of medical contexts. But in this case the word humour is just referring to the fluid and not referring to funny.

HaleyB said:

Right. Got that. Humour ='s body fluids which may or may not be funny. They are often funny. Especially if you are an eight year old.

The Four Humours are bile, black bile, blood, phlegm. This was really of Greek origin, hence the Greco-Latin names were Choler, Melancholer, Sanguis, and Phlegma. When these humours were in balance you were healthy, when they are out of balance then one dominates. If one dominates supposedly certain diseases would afflict you. But they also had an effect on personality. Thus if you have too much black bile, then you are melancholic - dark and depressed. Too much blood and you are sanguine - jolly but perhaps a bit too amorous. Too much bile and you are bilious (or choleric) - prone to anger. Too much phlegm and you are phlegmatic - lazy and gluttonous.

I bring this up for two reasons. First because I just love to jibber-jabber about old ideas. Second because I plan on using the words melancholic, bilious, phlegmatic, and sanguine, and so I figured some background would be useful. Third because I already used a few of them and had an itch I needed to scratch on the topic. And also I was worried about running dry of material and having a very short segment. Not sure why I worry 'bout that though, eh. Finally, I actually had no other reasons to add here, so this last sentence doesn't make a lot of sense - please ignore it.

HaleyB said:

Our dog is sleeping on some throw pillows I threw on the floor. He looks really cute. I know that has nothing to do with the above, but really, what could I add to that?

The Puzzle, eh.
For some reason Marketing did not find our last segment to actually be an improvement over other segments. Why they were unhappy was a bit of a puzzle for us, until they mentioned that we totally ignored everything that they said. So we are planning on dropping any historical references and killing any words with a bunch of syllables. Plain simple words of Anglo-Saxon origin. Avoid the frenchy stuff. And ultra-avoid the Latin stuff.

To Marketing, I say: Plus ca change, plus c'est la meme chose! (For our American friends, this is French for "go suck goats, Marketing drones!"

A long time ago, while reading an accursedly boring bedtime story to the kids about a lady spider who was a mail-delivery-agent (definitely not a mailman), who delivered mail to flies and other bugs for the hundredth time or so, I sneakily began to subtly change the story. This was a way to add some interest to a story that we would read over and over, and also a test to see it the kids were awake and listening. So when she went in to give a letter to an old housefly, I inserted the phrase, "and then baring her fangs, she punctured her exoskeleton and began to suck out her life juice." The phrase was suitably amusing that it wound up appearing in other stories. For instance, in the Velveteen Rabbit, one of the nursery toys occasionally would suck the life juice out of the Velveteen Rabbit. And at times the Velveteen Rabbit would suck the life juice out of the real rabbits (who were jerks and deserved it). Max and Sophia initially enjoyed these little insertions, and would occasionally call out "do the life juice!" And then over times they would demand "no life juice!" And then, being the way they are, they would sometimes fight over whether "doing the life juice" was appropriate.

Anywho, this goes by way of mentioning that in this trip report segment we will be playing a little game again. Which is that we will sneakily inserting somewhere in this report segment, a reference to a ride/show/product/event/something that is actually not available to people in MGM. See if you can spot it. If this seems like a déjà vu to you, well it's true. Yoo hoo. It is a déjà vu through and through. It's something we already did do. Now we do it times two. Now the rhyming is through. Thank goodness, too. Phew.

HaleyB said:

Sometimes he makes up a rap, and sings it to the kids. By way of motivation. He stops when they do the thing he wanted them to do. Often this is get ready for bed and brush their teeth. I should write it down sometime as the actual rap would be much more entertaining than my telling you about it. Anywho...
Capt. Silly said:

Some of the Rap last night went:
Yo, pasty butt,
you know what?
It's time to get moving
And groovin' and improvin'
And the clothes should be removin'
'Cuz it's Jammy time
And you're over the line
It's been ten minutes
Almost over. Out of time.
It's Jammy time
And you're over the line
And I'm running out of things
that rhyme with time.
If you don't get going now
I will have a cow,
and your book won't be read
And you'll have to lay your head
on a cold hard pillow
with nothing in your head.
You'll dream you'll push a plough
But you really won't know how
And then they'll be a sow.
And more stuff that rhymes with plough.
So you will regret it
If you don't get it
Generally headed
in a move on now.

I realize it looks bad. It's supposed to be bad. Just try making up a rap off the top of your head for ten minutes and you will probably find, as I do, that "bad" is the only option left after the first minute or two. Also the nickname "pasty butt" very much bothers the children, so I only break it out when they are slow or whatever.

Back to our report, eh.
In our last segment we noted that we were heading off to Star Tours. So we are out and about and that's where we are walking to. (For our American readers, in Canadian it is correct to end sentences with prepositions, FBI).

A note on walking, eh.
For about two months prior to the trip I was going to the gym regularly doing a long aerobic workout and doing weight training. With my beloved iPod, which makes time in the Gym oh so very much better. H. had been doing a water aerobics class prior to that by a few months and we went to the gym together to force each other to go. We did this since it is a good in itself, but also since we wanted to be strong for the Disney World vacation. And up to this point it was working pretty well while we were out and about in Disney World. We had a spring in our steps and glide in our stride. We were jamming. We had peppiness. This was strange. We usually aren't really that peppy. But there we were. Being peppy. This energy was not to last, but at the time it was great. I carried Sophia (55 pounds) all the way across Epcot on the night we arrived just because I could and felt fine afterwards. So if you are planning on going to Disney World and are generally sedentary, doing some exercise really helps.

A note on my shoes, eh.
Since we were referring to the gym, it seems as good a time as any to bring up the shoes I am wearing on this day in MGM. Since the crocs had failed me for the last time, I shifted to my primary park walking shoes, a pair of Reebok Cross Trainers that I got at an outlet in Freeport Maine. Before Sophia was born. This was when we were living in Nova Scotia, we were driving down to Boston and hit the outlets on the way and picked them up. Oh so long ago. Yes, my shoes are actually older than Sophie. It turns out that I don't actually use them too often, just when going to the gym, and I haven't done that enough in the last nine years or so to wear out the shoes. It's almost like there is some message buried in there that on closer scrutiny would indicate a particular fact about exercise patterns that would be somewhat troubling.

A note on that last note on my shoes, eh.
Why am I talking about my old shoes in a trip report? I just realized that I was writing about reflecting on the lessons I can learn from my shoes to people on the internet. And not just one sentence. Whoa. This is one of those moments when I really ought to step back for a moment and just sort of take a look at what the heck I am doing, and deeply reflect on things. What are my priorities? Where is my life really going? Am I really doing good in the world by talking about my old shoes on the internet? What is the good? Etc.? But instead I will press on

HaleyB said:

Good plan dear.

Back to our report again, eh.
Anywho, we walked to Star Tours.

HaleyB said:

While walking to Star Tours we kept a keen eye out for Minute Maid Frozen Lemonade. I was hopeful that Gertie's would have it. Of course I was also hopeful that the stuffed pretzel would be yummy. No luck on either front, but I am getting ahead of Mr. Silly here.

A note on a note on a really great Disney product - Disney Genuine Eye of Mara Advantage, eh
For the last few times we have gone to Disney Land we found a cool option that they had there - the Disney Genuine Eye of Mara Advantage. With this option, on entry to the park, you receive an ancient and mysterious idol representing a fearsome Indian deity. The deity had a special rare and precious jewel embedded into it's forehead which is known as the "Eye of Mara." It comes in a Naugahyde bag with various Disney related art on it. Anyone who looks on the eye will receive the gift of eternal youth, earthly riches or future knowledge. And they will also be cursed. The curse is that they will immediately leave any line that they are standing in, and beeline for the nearest souvenir stand, where they will pay full price for a very expensive souvenir. Luckily they can return it. The great thing about this option is that when you are in a long line, you strike up some kind of conversation with whoever is in front of you, and casually mention that you got a really neat souvenir. Then pull out the eye, careful not to look on it yourself. Bang. They all see the eye, jump out of line, and you are one place closer to the front. Used several times in a row this can really cut down on wait times.

This is useful in other contexts as well. If you are at a buffet and are waiting behind someone who is being annoyingly slow, just break out the eye and tap them on the shoulder. They'll be putting down their plate and running out the door.

And you don't even have to feel bad about it because they get eternal youth, earthly riches, or future knowledge. As far as I can tell they almost always get future knowledge. From what I have been able to discern, usually the future knowledge involves knowing just what it will be like to go through the return process for the souvenir. But every once in a while it has been other stuff. Like one time this guy knew who was going to win at a horse race in Tennessee that was going to happen in about ten minutes from then. Sadly he was not able to call his bookie fast enough, but that could have been quite valuable knowledge. In theory.

So this is a DisneyLand thing, but luckily for us, they were doing a test pilot of the program, so we were able to get one while we were at MGM. It was a one day thing, but we figured it would be handy. And it did turn out to be handy. It was especially funny to use on the kids since they couldn't actually buy stuff and would just be trapped standing at souvenir stands for hours... That last sentence was neither true nor funny.

HaleyB said:

It says clear as day on the carrying bag and in the instructions, in big bold block print "Do NOT look into the eye of Mara" but one of us always does. That is how we ended up with the $667 Nightmare Before Christmas collectible pin set. Tourists!
Sir. Silly said:

I was going to just gloss over that whole episode...


A note on the Star Wars weekend we were not enjoying, eh.
The first trip to Disney World with Max and Sophia we went in the springtime. When we were there, Star Wars Weekend was going on. Since I think H. never wrote a report on that trip (could be wrong), and since this is worth noting since it coloured our experiences this time to some degree, I think we need to digress a bit, eh.

HaleyB said:
Admiral Silly said:

Hmm, I never saw those... But I must not get distracted.

Star Wars weekend is, to use a California-ism, way totally rad, dude. As you start to walk in, you see the Storm Troopers stationed on the roofs of stuff at the front gate. And they are moving and doing Storm Trooper stuff, such as looking imposing, and failing to kill any of the good guys. We went into the Star Tours area, and they had done a really wonderful job on setting the whole thing up. The band from the cantina was playing on a stage, there were all sorts of CMs in Star Wars costumes that were cool, and they had the place tricked out. It being the first time we saw any of this, we were especially blown away by the AT-ATs and all the rest all working together. Inside Star Tours they had extra CMs in costume walking around. It was theming paradise.

HaleyB said:

Also one of the special guests was the guy who played Professor Flitwick. A new Harry Potter Movie released while we were in WDW (this was 2004, I think) and Max was and is a full on Harry Potter fanatic. So am I, really. And Mr. Silly. Sophia too. Soooo this was extra cool. Max looked (and to a point still looks) a lot like Harry. So much so that he won a costume contest at a book release party where there had to have been 50 other kids trying to look like Harry. I bet I covered all that in my Trip Report about that trip. You should read it.
General Silly said:

The Flitwick guy actually was short, BTW.

They had a Jedi training class where the kids learned to battle with Light Sabers. Max and Sophia both got picked to do this, and at the end Max battled Darth Vader, while Sophie battled Darth Maul. And we got lots of pictures. The Star Tours merch. was very cool, and seemed to have been better back then (though it might just be the fact that it was our first time seeing most of it). We bought a limited edition pin and some free action figures, and stuff. When we went to eat, Max went outside for a while to stand in the moonlight and contemplate his Jedi training. And we talked to some Harry Potter fans who noted that Max looked just like H.P. (he did at the time especially - he won two sequential H.P. costume contests on the release nights of two of the books).

HaleyB said:

Actually that second time it was Sophia... remember? She was Moaning Merytle? The judges told Max they recognized him from the last time...

So there we were, and it was just brilliant, and we were all blown away by how cool it was, and were generally sanguine the whole time we were there. Note that I used the word "sanguine," which refers to blood - one of the four humors.

Back to our report yet again, eh.
So now when we walk up to Star Tours Mr. Crankypants is able to fire of a few critiques - the whole area is just so bland - it's just not living up to its potential. It is still nice, but it is nothing compared to Star Wars Weekend bliss. We go on Star Tours. It is a quiet day. We get the front row. Whoo. The guy who is doing the boarding is amusing, though I can't remember any of his jokes. I took some notes I can't read, so if anyone has any ideas what might be a funny thing to say if you are a CM boarding people onto Star Tours feel free to contribute.

Since it was a short line we loop it. The thing about Star Tours is that it is kind of nice to wander a bit slowly through the line leading up to boarding to hear a bit of the banter between R2 and 3PO, to check out the droid workshop area, to listen to the misbehaving droid. And looking up at the control tower where Admiral Akbar is and calling out, "It's a trap." And so on. They did such a nice job on all this. So the second time through we go a bit more slowly and let a few people pass us so we can ogle the awesome set design.

The cast member has Max and Sophie "use the force" to open the door. Then we board, and we get the front row again. Holy Cow. It is quiet enough that we don't even fill every available seat in the row. We just stop in the middle since there isn't anyone behind us. I feel distinctly unpatriotic, but let's not dwell on it.

We go to the Muppet Movie next. It is always fun. I grab four pairs of glasses and rub them all over my armpits for a while, stick each in my nose a bit, and then throw three back in.

We watch the pre-show cartoon, read the labels on the prop boxes, and things take a somewhat more melancholic turn as we reflect on how great Jim Henson was, and think that we need to make sure that Dark Crystal is in the Netflix queue, and maybe some Muppet Movies, especially Muppets in Space. We only saw that one in the theatres. Note that I used the term "melancholic," one of the four humors. Aren't they handy?

The doors open. There is clearly a smaller than expected crowd. Sam the Eagle chides us that stopping in the middle is distinctly unpatriotic. But the CM at the front tells us to go ahead and stop in the middle. Like it's not a violation of the Disney Social Contract to stop in the middle. While once again not feeling exactly right about this, we stop in the middle in very good seats. The first time this movie is seen it pegs the awesometer at 100%. On subsequent watchings it is still very excellent, hitting somewhere in the mid 80s to the mid 90s depending on how well ordered one's soul is.

We exit. We go to get snacks again despite the lack of Minute Maid Frozen Lemonade. Max and H. go to the snack place on the lake. Sophie and I go to a different Ice Cream cart to get strawberry bars. As we are walking there, I notice a place near the entrance to the Indiana Jones show that sells food. I check hoping that maybe somehow they sell the real Minute Maid Frozen Lemonade. No such luck. But they do sell some weird thing called Arepas. It is a fried corn cake wrapped around Mozarella cheese. I decide I must get one. We get one, then get our strawberry bars at the cart, and then go back to the place where H. and Max are. They have gotten some stuff among which is a pop and a stuffed pretzel thing that sounds good but turns out to not be good. The first time we had Strawberry bars they had a sort of waxy coating on the outside that we pretty good and also helped to keep them from melting and dripping. This time they are just plain. They are still good, though not as good. Max believes they are gross, his main complaint against them being the waxy coating. Even though we can now demonstrate that they are different and have no waxy coating, he still persists in his view that they are gross. I try to explain that they are basically sorbet on a stick, and he likes sorbet, but he will have none of it.

Having had our snack, from there we get some popcorn. We get the big bucket. We try to pay for it, but their room key/credit system is down. After a few failures they give it to us for free. Whoo.

HaleyB said:

Free food! We do the Zzub Hi-Ho-Cherry-O victory dance.

We wander into pin-mania in the hat. There are tons of pins here. I think we traded some and got a Lion Witch and Wardrobe pin that we traded for something else later. There were many instances of pin trades.

HaleyB said:

Yes there were, including one very misguided one. We now need to find a pin with "Dot" on it. From 'Bug's Life", TFI (FBI). But that actually happens latter.

From there we went to the Little Mermaid show. Sophia is still a bit short and has a problem with the chairs that are used in shows in Disney World. If anyone sits in front of her she can see their head. If it is an adult then we do what we can to switch seats around to have a child or a short person in front of her. She still sits on the edge of the chair folded up, or kneels on the seat so that there is no obstruction whatsoever. We have tried to explain that having someone's head blocking your view of some feet really is no big deal, but she is very obsessive about having an absolutely clear view. The show itself is really amazing. They have some very talented designers and puppeteers. It is kind of cool how sometimes enough light will be reflected that you can make out the people in black who are moving things about since it makes you appreciate what is going into the show. The lady in front of us had a video camera that she tried to hide. And she was wearing a black touque, so she looked criminal somehow. We were disturbed, bilious even, but did not go into vigilante mode on her. Hoser. Note that we used the word "bilious," one of the four humors. We mowed hard on popcorn. Disney popcorn is extra delicious so this is perhaps one reason why it all disappeared so quickly. Perhaps we were excessively phlegmatic. Note that we used the word "phlegmatic," another of the four humors. Now you can see how knowing these words can actually be handy in your day to day life. I like to think that my engaging in this sort of thing is really just a practicality.

From here we go to the Narnia display. It is clearly a temporary display, and mostly a commercial, but it is still pretty neat. The wintertime displays are really well done. The one outside has the odd psychological effect of causing one to feel cooler while standing in the 90 degree heat. Almost makes me want to put on a toque (Canadian for a beanie). The more interesting parts to us were really the the costumes and props that they had on display at the end. Most people went past without a pause, but we were nerds and loitered for a good while, and also talked to the CM and looked at his lanyard.

HaleyB said:

We distracted him so he left the snow on for a long time. I am not sure if Mr. Silly noticed that part and I didn't want to point out that he was controlling it to the kids. He was a really nice guy, which seems to be the norm with CM's. Maybe they are all Canadians?

As we walked along we grabbed ice off some carts. I just held mine in my hands to cool down, but Sophie dropped some in my pocket (I am up on her tricks and quickly recovered this time). Max tried to get H. by dropping ice down her back. H.'s patience with ice fun is decreasing. Rapidly.

From here we go to the Back Stage Tour. We haven't done this before, so it is all new to us, eh. I like seeing the props, and seeing the drivers from the car show driving where we can see them at certain points. When we get on the tram, I check to make sure the kids have seatbelts on - after all this ride does a high speed corkscrew loop. After the ride is over, Max is upset since he hoped to get wetter, since the ride threatened that it might get you wet. I pour some water from a water bottle into my hand and make a really swell splash that got him and Sophie wet. That wasn't what he had in mind.

HaleyB said:

Max and Sophia are always trying (and failing) to get wet. We have season passes to Sea World because we live way too far from Disneyland to have season passes there. All summer Max and Sophia would sit in the splash zones... and not get wet. It became sort of a grail for them, getting soaked. It is good to have goals in life.

In the gift shop I have Kermit do a few silly things, including a great frog dance, not realizing this will trigger a series of events that culminates in us acquiring two Kermits, small for Sophie, big for Max. They actually turned out to like these quite a lot, which surprised me as I expected them to be forgotten.

Speaking of Kermit, if you know who the band the Talking Heads is, click this link. Otherwise click it anyway, but be prepared to be confused.

They go to the princess stuff shop and torture me by fiddling with princess fru-fru for a long time. Sophie explains to me that she is torturing me by taking extra time. Dear sweet Sophie. They keep taking a long time. They play with the crown thing. They test out all the fancy princess crown options. I point out that the crown is like a brazillion dollars and we are not getting it. They ignore me and play with the crown some more. Then they look at the birth stone stuff. I consider pointing out that birth stones are a holdover from the medieval era, but I am not entirely sure about it, so I hold off. I am glad that I don't, because it turns out that the idea is probably much older than that (Exodus 39:10-14), and also because the particulars that have been settled on were only decided in the 20th century. I just briefly stepped back and thought, "I am writing a report about a trip to Disney World for people on the Internet where I just explained that I had a thought about talking about birthstones that I did not express,and then gave an account of the incompleteness of my original account. Like, dude, what's the deal?" "Dude, what's the deal," indeed, eh.

HaleyB said:
The Silly said:

So far the lines have all been short, and so I have not really had any reason to use the Eye of Mara. I briefly consider using the Eye of Mara on my own party members at this point. But I realize that they would then just walk up to the cash wrap with something expensive, and that is not an outcome I really want.

We want to make the Beauty and the Beast show so we wandered into the exit for the The Magic of Disney Animation so as to not waste time on the show. It's good, but having seen it and being on a limited schedule it got slashed. At the end of the show is when you can do the drawing lessons. This is really cool since they do a nice job of explaining how to draw a particular Disney character, but they switch to a new character each time. H. Sophie, and I think this is the best thing in the park, and Max is very positive. We do this one twice. While waiting outside we run into a guy we talked to at the bus stop at the Pop. He has several Monorail pins. I am searching for Monorail pins. I ask him where he found them, but he is vague, he is just going around trading. We do the drawing thing, and draw Donald and one other character. We would have done it more, but sadly this is not possible as we need to bail for Beauty and the Beast. In fact if we ever go to MGM again, we are going to book a big block of time for this.

HaleyB said:

IF??? He means when. Next year. I think we should get AP's next year and take a few shorter trips, because it will be much harder to pull Max out of school for 10 days next year. (He will be in Middle School). Unless I home school him or get him into a year round school...
Meister Silly said:

Nothing I could possibly say here would work out to my advantage. This is me saying nothing. But loudly.

I didn't go into a lot of detail about this part above, but in fact, this is one of the coolest parts of MGM. H. & I have agreed that if we ever return to Disney World, and if when we go we decide to go into MGM, that we need to put aside a block of time to be sure to be able to do this drawing thing at least four times in a row. Minimum. Ideally with the option to do it more, should we want to.

HaleyB said:

Again with the 'if', he means when.
Meister Silly said:

Again, nothing I could possibly say here would work out to my advantage. This is me again saying nothing. But loudly again.

Sophia was so pleased by her experiences that we later got her a Disney sketchbook thing at MGM that included instructions on how to draw characters (though in less detail and with fewer steps than the live artists). When she got home I noticed that our mortar and pestle (in which we had been storing garlic, odd small keys, and other odd small objects) had been dumped and the mortar was missing. (In case you are wondering, the mortar is the bowl, the pestle is the stick thing). I found it in the entryway upside down on a piece of paper. Sophie was using it to make circles. That also explained why she had been asking me about compasses (the kind you use to make circles).

We charge off to the Beauty and the Beast show. It is still early for the show. We get a pretzel. It's good. Everyone wants a piece with a lot of salt on it, which is challenging. If I had a computer and some time I could probably work out a way of fairly dividing it so we each got a fair share of both pretzel and salt. But I have neither. So we just rip into it and it's gone quickly.

We get in the line for popcorn. It is an annoyingly long line. I fondle the Naugahyde wrapped idol, and think about things... I break down and pull it out. I lightly tap the person in front of me on the shoulder, "hey there, take a look at this amazing souvenir I got at the Indiana Jones souvenir booth, eh." The guy looks at it. Right in the eye. Bang. I think "Score!" He says, "I must get a souvenir refillable Popcorn bucket immediately" in a kind of zombie voice. Dang. Foiled! Eventually we get to the front, although the zombified guy in front of us is slow to pay due to his condition. We finally get to the front. "How's it going, eh?" "Fine, fine." "I'd like a refill bucket on this here, please, eh?" She takes the bucket and looks at it. She turns it upside down. She scrutinizes it. "Oh, this is a collectable bucket, not a refillable one." "Whaa?" I say internally. I briefly consider using the eye on the cast member, and then just jumping back there an refilling it, but:
1) the ethical implications of that seem bad,
2) that would be a VLM (Visit Limiting Move),
3) I think CMs are trained about the eye, and know not to look into it.
So I realize I will fail, remember that the first bucket was free, and just get another popcorn. Which was really awesome Disney popcorn. Without a doubt, eh.

The crowd is light and when they open it up, we are among the first ones in. We select a nice choice seat. A really dang fine seat. A Wicked Good seat (that is in the Maine dialect, but Mainers are practically Canadians). You know how with shows, you want to sit on the T, so you either want to be close to the front, or along the center? We were front and center. Is there a word for "front and center" at a theatre? Besides "front and center"?

There are still a few people in front of us, and since we are pretty close to the front we are more looking across to the stage rather then looking down. We then have an annoyingly long discussion with Sophie about how even if you can't see the actor's feet, that's okay, that's not where the action is. I tell her that if the show starts, and suddenly shoes become really important Sophie can sit on my lap to get some more altitude. This is yet another recurrent theme. Haley was on the phone the whole time trying to change the Tea time at the Grand Floridian to some other time since it is logistically better, but I think it doesn't work out. Then someone else calls H., a Dis-er. Not sure who. My notes say "blah blah... getting up early... blah blah... blah blah." Followed by "Learned something, mommy's a stress-basket." The show starts. Sophie wants up on Mommy's lap. In the 90 degree heat. I volunteer, but I am not good enough. Only Mommy will do. We watch the show. It is swell. Beauty, eh?

HaleyB said:

I was trying to change or Tea time (sorry B, not tee time) to Sunday. No dice. The DIS call was from Horsey!!! She was finally here, and we planned to try to meet up later that day. Silly also forgot to mention that before the show that fab foursome, Four For a Dollar were on. I like their shtick. Sophia and Max both got suckered in by it and the idea of someone doing something they shouldn't be doing really appealed to them. Big surprise there.
Those guys are fantastic. They sang Happy Birthday to a kid in the audience and gave her one of their CD's. I made a mental note of this, just in case we are ever in WDW on one of our birthdays.

From here we head to dinner. At the Sci-Fi. Which we haven't been to. Before. Along the way there is a great street show where different comics are in character for various 20s/30s personalities and they have an improv joke contest where people are selected randomly to pick some object or word, and the actors have to come up with jokes following a certain form that uses that word. You can see that they have to struggle not to push the innuendo too far, especially when the word the randomly selected audience member offers is "hoe" (the gardening tool). But the ADR presses upon us with its powerful temporal and culinary insistence, so we take off, eh.

They have messed up our ADR and think that we are a party of 5. We correct this. This is to become a theme, eh. The people who handle reservations have hosed them for pretty much every meal. What a bunch of hosers.

HaleyB said:

We get a car and watch movies, Max talks to chef, and gets ribs, I get spinach artichoke dip for an appetizer and I think H. does to, but maybe we shared it and shared onion rings. The spinach artichoke dip is way good. H. and I get shakes which are also way good. I got the Vegetable Potato Bake which is actually quite good. H. got some Shrimp Penne thing she appeared to like. Max is okay with his food, and Sophie likes whatever she got. The desserts are good too. The best part is the free dining bit. No spending hard earned loonies on food, eh. (For our American friends, the loonie is the Canadian one dollar coin). That is sure to put you in a more sanguine mood. I like campy 50s sci-fi movies, think Ed Wood's movies are hilarious, and try to rent Mystery Science Theatre 3000 stuff from Netflix. The giant Gila Monster, and the 50 Foot Woman are great, as is the guy in the ape costume with the alien mask. Thus we are delighted. At first. But the loop is too short and it gets tiresome to watch the same campy stuff over and over. Especially because some of it is just kind of annoyingly bad but not quite bad enough to put one into full scale mock-and-scorn mode. But at the same time we mow tons of food and are rather phlegmatic. My notes say, "ugh. God. we ate way too much. ugh. man. ugh." We want to lie down on a chesterfield (a sofa for our American friends)

HaleyB said:

Or a Devonshire. Also a couch. It was the milkshakes that did us in. But boy were those good. Sophia mentioned to me just today (real time) that the Sci-Fi was her favorite meal this time, although she quickly changed that to 'one of' her favorite meals. Sophia is a foodie.

After we finish we waddle off to Fantasmic feeling over-stuffed. Fantasmic is another case where DisneyLand kicks DisneyWorld's posterior in many respects. Since in DLand they put the show on in the Rivers of America, they are able to integrate Captain Hook's pirate ship, and other boats that are cooler than the barge thing they use in MGM. We settle into a nice spot. It is still a bit warm out. It is starting to get darker, and the people with the flashing lights and other stuff are out in full force hawking their wares. We invent a new term to describe all the light-toy stuff they sell - "Blink-Bling." This phrase's awesomeness is so great that we repeat it repeatedly.

HaleyB said:

Max sees the thingie that shoots a day-glo colored string around in a loop. He is hooked. I am still feeling some guilt over the Minute Maid Frozen Lemonade issue, so I agree to seek one out for him.

People in the crowd start doing "the wave." Our crowd tonight is not in top form, but eventually we get a wave that ripples back and forth from end to end a few times. There are expert crowd trainers on hand getting everyone to do the wave and their hard work eventually paid off.

HaleyB said:

I must have been off seeking some Blink-bling that I could purchase without cash. Because I didn't have any cash on me. FBI, the big merchandise carts as you walk in take cards. So I invested in some bling and then realized I needed to learn how to make it work. A really nice kid/CM spent a loooong time showing me how that darn thing worked. It is not as easy as it looks. For me. The kids picked it up pretty fast.
Oh, I guess I am getting ahead of Mr. Silly again. Sorry aboot that.

We have some glow sticks in the pack, we break those out. Max sees a new thing that is a loop of string with day-glo colours on a handle where the loop gets shot out so that it kind of hovers in the air and gets hit by a black light so it looks extra cool in the dark. Max wants the new thing, so we get him one, figuring if we get it early we will enjoy it longer at the parks. Max loves it. He is down with his blink-bling. Tension builds for a while as he has a few problems getting it going just so at first, but soon he has it down. Tensions mount again as Sophie wants to play with Max' new toy. Happily the show starts soon enough that they forget about the bling and check out the spectacle.

The show is good, with its share of weird. The day-glo monkeys on the floats were definitely more weird than good.

HaleyB said:

There was an adorable couple sitting in front of us. Vera funny. We chatted with them a little. He had Mickey Ears with his name on them, so I started to refer to him by name. I wish I could find my notes... you will just have to trust me about the vera funny part.

I have decided that the Imagineers are pyromaniacs. I have thought this off and on for many moons, but the WDW version of Fantasmic! confirmed it once and for all. Also I think I have some idea about what they were up to in the 60's. The Day-Glo Gorillas killed me. What the heck???
Have I mentioned yet that the original Fantasmic! show at Disneyland is way better than the one at MGM? It is. So much so that alone is worth a trip. The fireworks are really groovy too, and Toon Town rocks in Disneyland, puts the MK one to shame, even. Oh and Fantasyland looks nicer. Also New Orleans square is just better than New England square. I am really looking forward to our trip to California this Summer. TFI.

From there we were done. We went back to Hollywood Blvd., and meandered through the shops for a long while to let the bus lines die down. We scored a few choice pin trades. Sophia found a sketchbook that explained how to draw Disney characters, and H. found a few Xmas ornaments (a Tinkerbell one and a Stitch with Ukulele one) which we acquired. Eventually we got on the bus, rode to the Pop. We get back to the Pop. My notebook is dangerously full. At the Pop store I look at notebook-type-things and find a relatively nice (though a little too girly) Eyore themed diary that I purchase to serve as a notebook. We get back to the room eventually, hastily do our bedtime prep. and collapse into sleep quickly. I took no notes on any of this, as it was mundane.

HaleyB said:

Wait. I thought the rule was mundane = lots of notes?
Mr. S. said:

Wait you're right. The real reason was that we were running out of space in the Blue Mead notebook.

This was our only day at MGM, and we were happy that we got in all the things we wanted to do, and were fine with skipping things like "Indiana Jones Epic Stunt Spectacular," "Sounds Dangerous," "The Great Movie Ride," the car-show-thingie and so on. We had already done most of the things we skipped (except the car-show-thingie). A lot of the MGM shows are good as one-offs, and are not really worth repeating. The Beauty & the Beast and Mermaid shows were worth repeating. And we need to do the drawing thing a lot more.

HaleyB said:

See, I told you he meant 'when' and not 'if,' I am always right. Future TR sections prove this.
Mr. S. said:

This is me not commenting.

Next - Day 3 - Epicot
 

I just got done with the first two paragraphs.
YOU ARE SUCH A DORK! I love it! :rotfl2:

Ok. Now I have to go back and finish reading, eh.
 
Hey Sillys, good to see you're not listening to Marketing. Their way would have you all cookie-cuttered and ordinary. Your way has Mr. Silly getting promoted each time he edits!

Let me know if you have a yard sale, maybe I can pop over and get the String Thing at a rock bottom price. Is Max bored with it yet?
 
Thank You!! I finally have the bait to lure DH firmly into the world of the DIS, which we all know equates to minimizing the time between visits to the world itself!!!

Aside from the liberal smattering of psychological, greco-asian art & Mac-biased references, you are his techno, hawaiian shirt, rule of 42 doppelganger! Seriously, the rule of 42 alone is enough to pique his curiosity to finally sit down & read this. Now, would you be adverse to throwing in a few asides referencing your speculation regarding theories and properties of gravity & the fascination/preservation of truly superior yeast strains in the interest of yielding consistent & spectacular beers to gild the lily for me just a little? :rolleyes1
 
/
Mr. Silly said:
In the spirit of international harmony and goodwill, we have decided to post this segment of the report translated into a foreign language. Seeing as there are a lot of Canadians on the board, that's the language we will use, eh. So a big hello to our eskimo friends to the north.

Well thank you for that, eh? :teeth:

Another INTERESTING installment :rotfl:
 
OMG, you guys are too funny!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! :lmao:

Thank you for keeping it up! Wating for the next part now
 
OK, now you are just showing off! THAT was FOF!!!!!

I read every word. Loved it all!

I toad-ally agree aboot Disneyland being amazingly better in many respects. The Fantasmic there is worth the trip alone.

I cant believe you boughtthose blink-blings! Money-Bags!

Homie-Haley, you did alright for yourself, girl!

You out-did yourselves. THIS will be on the all-time top 10 TR's guaranteed!
 
Mr.VerySilly Sad: A note on an archaic medical theory, eh.
The ancient Greeks had relatively sophisticated medical knowledge to some degree, but in some respects their views were very limited. These views, good and bad, by and large were adopted by Rome and later Medieval Europe, and things only really started to change with the Renaissance when learning from the Arabic world (which was much more medically sophisticated than contemporary Medieval Europe), and the new learning from other sources spurred on changes into views, and more inquiry into medical science. One place where the Greek views were a bit iffy is the theory of the Four Humours (Humors for our American readers).

In the past I gave a list of rules for things that were humourous. The Four Humors is not actually referring to things that are funny, but to bodily fluids. Okay, body fluids can be funny. They often are, outside of medical contexts. But in this case the word humour is just referring to the fluid and not referring to funny.


Quote:
Originally Posted by HaleyB

Right. Got that. Humour ='s body fluids which may or may not be funny. They are often funny. Especially if you are an eight year old.


The Four Humours are bile, black bile, blood, phlegm. This was really of Greek origin, hence the Greco-Latin names were Choler, Melancholer, Sanguis, and Phlegma. When these humours were in balance you were healthy, when they are out of balance then one dominates. If one dominates supposedly certain diseases would afflict you. But they also had an effect on personality. Thus if you have too much black bile, then you are melancholic - dark and depressed. Too much blood and you are sanguine - jolly but perhaps a bit too amorous. Too much bile and you are bilious (or choleric) - prone to anger. Too much phlegm and you are phlegmatic - lazy and gluttonous.

Did you read The Physician by Noah Gordon? It's my favorite medical historical fiction, tfi. I learned all about humours there, and they were pretty nasty.

Mr.Creepy sad: So when she went in to give a letter to an old housefly, I inserted the phrase, "and then baring her fangs, she punctured her exoskeleton and began to suck out her life juice." The phrase was suitably amusing that it wound up appearing in other stories. For instance, in the Velveteen Rabbit, one of the nursery toys occasionally would suck the life juice out of the Velveteen Rabbit. And at times the Velveteen Rabbit would suck the life juice out of the real rabbits (who were jerks and deserved it). Max and Sophia initially enjoyed these little insertions, and would occasionally call out "do the life juice!" And then over times they would demand "no life juice!" And then, being the way they are, they would sometimes fight over whether "doing the life juice" was appropriate.

Haley, hide the sharp knives.

Mr. SillyRhymer sad: See if you can spot it. If this seems like a déjà vu to you, well it's true. Yoo hoo. It is a déjà vu through and through. It's something we already did do. Now we do it times two. Now the rhyming is through. Thank goodness, too. Phew.
Where do you think you are? Seussical??????? :rotfl2: :rotfl2: :lmao:

Quote:
Originally Posted by Capt. Silly

Some of the Rap last night went:
Yo, pasty butt,
you know what?
It's time to get moving
And groovin' and improvin'
And the clothes should be removin'
'Cuz it's Jammy time
And you're over the line
It's been ten minutes
Almost over. Out of time.
It's Jammy time
And you're over the line
And I'm running out of things
that rhyme with time.
If you don't get going now
I will have a cow,
and your book won't be read
And you'll have to lay your head
on a cold hard pillow
with nothing in your head.
You'll dream you'll push a plough
But you really won't know how
And then they'll be a sow.
And more stuff that rhymes with plough.
So you will regret it
If you don't get it
Generally headed
in a move on now.

I realize it looks bad. It's supposed to be bad. Just try making up a rap off the top of your head for ten minutes and you will probably find, as I do, that "bad" is the only option left after the first minute or two. Also the nickname "pasty butt" very much bothers the children, so I only break it out when they are slow or whatever.

Don't quit your day job. Do you HAVE a day job?

Mr.Fitness sad: Back to our report, eh.
In our last segment we noted that we were heading off to Star Tours. So we are out and about and that's where we are walking to. (For our American readers, in Canadian it is correct to end sentences with prepositions, FBI).

A note on walking, eh.
For about two months prior to the trip I was going to the gym regularly doing a long aerobic workout and doing weight training. With my beloved iPod, which makes time in the Gym oh so very much better.
Apparently we're also going to adopt the Dutch habit of putting periods at the end of sentence fragments, too.
Mr.Thrifty sad: Having had our snack, from there we get some popcorn. We get the big bucket. We try to pay for it, but their room key/credit system is down. After a few failures they give it to us for free. Whoo.

You been holding this gem out on us??? :cheer2: :cheer2: Geez! Yu've been home almost a month!!!!!!
Mr. Smartypants sad: The lady in front of us had a video camera that she tried to hide. And she was wearing a black touque, so she looked criminal somehow. We were disturbed, bilious even, but did not go into vigilante mode on her. Hoser. Note that we used the word "bilious," one of the four humors. We mowed hard on popcorn. Disney popcorn is extra delicious so this is perhaps one reason why it all disappeared so quickly. Perhaps we were excessively phlegmatic. Note that we used the word "phlegmatic," another of the four humors.

LOVE 'bilious.' I must work that one into conversation soon. Oh, I'd have to get off the computer to do that.

Shoot. The school bus just sqeaked up.

I'll finish later.
I love this thing.
 
Hi everybody. Thanks for your comments and kind words. I'll post some responses tomorrow, as it is late here and I need to go to bed in a minute. But I got the comments from H. on Section 7 now, so I am going to plop that down.
 
Me said:

Those are to our May 2004 Trip Report. The links still work, I checked. I have no idea what I said in those, I hope nothing I will regret leading you to... :blush:
 
Chapter 7 - a new notebook.

My new notebook has one phrase written prominently on the top page in fairly clear handwriting:

Crème-Brûlée-Rama

It even has the funny accent marks. I like to use funny accent marks. They somehow make things seem so much more correct. And maybe I have a latent fear of disappointing my French teacher. Don't call me an approval-seeker because of this. I am more of a latent inaccurophobe.

Anyhow the new notebook was started, but with it no new leaves about neat printing or focusing on interesting non-bus stop related details were turned. I have had it with new leaves. At this point I am a withered old leaf and that is that. I am more like a soggy brown melted lettuce that was really old and looking very bad before you went on that month long vacation and then you came back, and you saw it and it was bad enough that you just didn't do anything about it hoping someone else would take care of it, which just made it even older. And soggier. And browner. And eventually it was just a sticky brown blob of goop in the bottom of the produce drawer. I am like that with respect to turning over new leaves. This was due to a disappointing string of past leaf turnings, in which I kept turning out like myself. So there you are. Or more accurately, so there I am. A sticky brown blob of goop. Metaphorically speaking.

Just because it is important to bring up, the notebook really isn't a notebook. I'll post a picture of it soon when I am less lazy. It's more of a chick diary thing. Or one of those books females get and then write in for non-diary purposes. But it's definitely got a chick vibe. Now being a very old man (at least spiritually), I don't entirely give a crap what anyone thinks of me. If they are critical of me, screw 'em. At least screw 'em after very carefully and critically analyzing any critical thing that was said and worrying about it and then verifying absolutely that it must, in fact, be necessarily false. So screw 'em. That's my motto. Well, that's not really my motto. I don't have a motto. If I did have a motto it would be something else. Something that was nicer than that. Like "rad salads." "Baring her fangs she sucked out his life juice." Or "might look like a weird hippie, but is actually not a hippie, but something predominantly non-hippie. And not into that 60s music at all. And doesn't own a tie-dye. And doesn't have a bong. So why do you keep bringing up hippies?" I think that last motto, while not catchy, and not actually reflective of any recent conversations, really is not a good motto. And doesn't express anything relevant. At all. So why are you bringing it up? Anyway, moving on...

So I just read the first lines of the diary/notebook/chick-book-thing. The ones after that great Crème-Brûlée-Rama line. And they were really dull. Tedious really. But since you insist. Or, well, you can't insist, since writing this is really one directional, but pretending that you had insisted, thinking that I wasn't serious about them being dull, but was just being modest, here they are: "Got up. Very tired. Took shower. Haley and kids took off to go get coffee & meet up in line while I took care of (something unintelligible) business." Now that part in parentheses that said "something unintelligible" actually said a word different than "something unintelligible," but I can't read it. It's a shame, because knowing me, that was probably the only amusing part of that whole section. And now I can't tell what it says. It looks like "aocitional," but that's not a word. But words ending in -tional in that context seem like they have to be funny. So let's all imagine the most amusing word that can in that context and fill it in. Mine is "ratiocinational." What's yours? Heh, got you - this is one-dimensional writing - I couldn't actually hear you. Heh heh.
HaleyB said:

So you never really talked about the Crème-Brûlée-Rama. Did you (gentle reader) know there is a thread dedicated to Crème-Brûlée? Where they have it, which one is best. It is a Crème-Brûlée love fest.

Mr. Silly is a big fan of Crème-Brûlée, tfi.
Mr. S. said:

So the explanation is really pretty simple if you are ratiocinational about it for a while. It's the first line in the book. It's really a pre-summary hopefully placed at the very beginning as an expectation that it would effectively sum up my the account of the trip. As it turns out I only skipped a chance at Crème-Brûlée one time, and that was because it had figs in it (eew), so it worked out pretty well. Though there were a lot of non-eating-Crème-Brûlée-related activities. Really, I should probably skip most of that and get to the Crème-Brûlée, as that was the most interesting parts, culinarily speaking.

Marketing complains about this kind of stuff, BTW. They want this whole thing to be bi-directional, so that as I am writing, you are actually able to respond back in real time. I pointed out that this would suck. As I write I make spelling error that I go back and correct. But if you were reading it in real time you would point those out. And I would be annoyed because I was just about to go back and correct that, thankyouverymuch. And sometimes I pause at unexpected points. For instance even in writing this paragraph I paused twice. Once for kind of a while. Well, not very long, really. More like a second or two. Okay, it was really just to prove the point. But sometimes I pause for much longer. For hours at a time, even. They then want to figure out a way to force me to write it all out once, and then every time a person read it, make me type it all out again, so that readers could pop in and say things. I pointed out that I had a day job, and that was not going to really work out. They came up with another plan at that point, but it is too depressing to even point out, but it involve real time video conferencing with every reader simultaneously at an agreed upon time and all of us sharing in some words I couldn't quite make out as I was already walking off.

So now six paragraphs into this trip report section (and with a few initial abortive attempts at paragraphs that look more like sentences or sentence fragments) we have woken up, showered, and planned to meet people in some kind of line. Still not sure what kind of line exactly, but given the context, we can probably assume a bus line. Because that's always where we met when we did the separation thing. And it was always a source of deep anxiety to H. Because inevitably I somehow didn't make it to the bus line quite as quickly as she expected, so instead of getting on the very first bus and getting to the park before opening and standing around somewhere near the front waiting to get in, we kept winding up on the next bus, and getting there early and standing around waiting slightly less time but still getting to do everything we wanted. Except at Epcot. But that wasn't my fault. It was H.'s fault. No. Kidding. Nothing is H.'s fault. Ever. She is faultless. This is drifting into sort of uncomfortable territory here. The kind of territory where you are standing a maze of twisty little passages, all alike. And no matter which way you go, you are likely to get eaten by a grue. So we will change topics.
HaleyB said:

I like that last part.

At this point I would like to just cite the first page, as it kind of sums up my life. As well as that morning:

Mr. Silly's diary/notebook/chick-book-thing said:
I headed out. Got out door. Dang. Forgot Bagellini. Dang. Haley has all keys. Agh. Walked to bus stop. Not there. Went to cafetorium highplure (editorial note - the exact word here is indeterminable, so we tried to get as close as possible to the letters as we saw them so that if a reader had an active imagination they might come up with a meaningful way to make out a word that used similar letters that really did make up a word).
HaleyB said:

Perhaps you wrote hoi polloi??? The chef at Everything Pop was really nice about making Max special waffles he could eat. And they always came with little jars of real maple syrup too. But it took, roughly speaking, forever and a day to get them. So I am not surprised that Mr. Silly found us in the cafetorium and not at the bus stop.
(Additional editor's note - I did use the word cafetorium, which is the neuter form of the word cafeteria - we try not to be sexist about cooking related activities, especially when many of the great chefs of the world are men, and so no gender even really makes sense - it's a place - places don't have genders - usually - except for 13 year old girl's rooms that have all that pink frilly stuff and the weird little vanity desk things and all the posters of unicorns and stuff - that has a female gender - but besides that - and maybe a few other very gender specific places - no place really has a gender, thus cafetorium - also the eating place at our kid's school really is called a 'cafetorium' - seriously). (ed. note - back to the story - sorry if I broke the thread a bit - feel free to backtrack a bit if you need to - I'll wait). Scanned. Scanned more. Scanned. Found them. Got key. Haley also wanted hat. Walked back. "Get hat." "Gotta remember hat." "Must remember hat." Got to room. Scanned. Found hat. Headed out. Got to stairs. Dang! Forgot bag. Stupid bag. Back to room. I am pathetic. Clock I read. (editor's note - once again that last sentence was unreadable, but I have supplied as close as possible to the original text so that some future scholars analyzing this trip report to try to understand the ancient culture of the lost civilization of America might perhaps be able to make out - by the way, to the future archaeologists looking back at this, hi guys, good luck sorting it all out, please do not judge us by People magazine - the title is somewhat misleading.) Got bag. Left again. People are slow. Double strollers are evil. Wow this is a long walk. Especially behind a double stroller. Got to bus. Stop. The bus had come. It waited extra for me. Then left. Alas.

You'll note that the style is much more terse. Since I hate printing I tend to write a lot less. Whereas, while I don't like typing, I also don't hate it. So I do it more. And more. And keep typing. And type long passages in which I make bad metaphors involving lettuce in a refrigerator turning into a sticky brown blob of goop. Oh, I think I figured out "highplure." I think it said nightmare. You can see how similar those words are.

So if you read the last part of Section 7, you might have noticed that it said, "Next - Day 3 - Epicot," and yet here we are at the end with no Epcot. Sorry. It turns out that we leave off this segment having left our room and almost gotten onto a bus. Next up - actually entering a park, I swear.
HaleyB said:

Since we didn't get very far, I don't really have much to add here. We really did spend most of our time in the parks. Really really.
 
New Interactivity Feature - a Puzzle

The Marketing Department was complaining that the report segments were too "mono-directional." Just us blabbing at an audience member or two. According to them, we needed to "break the fourth wall." They suggested that we include some kind of interactive content to make the audience feel more directly involved. Also we were to quit with the big words and academic blabbing. And post less frequently. To much product on the market cheapens it. And keep the posts to 2000 words max. And ease off on the ancient history stuff, this is a trip report, not a monogram on the elements of Platonism discovered in Disney World. I'm still not clear on why Marketing people never like that kind of stuff, but there they are.

Yes, sometimes I get to work with people who idolize Action Item.

In our efforts to implement their plans, we were not entirely successful in realizing all that stuff, but we have added a new feature - a puzzle. Somewhere in the trip report below we have secretly (and quite subtly and obscurely) hidden a Disney product/feature/element that does not actually exist. See if you can find it.

Now some wags out there might say something like this: "That puzzle's not very interactive. Maybe not really interactive at all, depending on how you define it."

To which we respond that we are still on Trip Report version 1.1 beta. Once we are ready to release 1.5 we will have a bit more interactive interactivity available. The road map currently has 2.0 implementing a full 3D virtual reality trip report in which you wander through a 3D representation of Disney World with a narrator with excellent and advanced next-generation artificial intelligence who will relate fascinating and delightful stories of our adventures as one moves through Disney World. This dynamic customer oriented strategy will pipeline an ultra-ergonimic, top down, customer-centric design which will be based on reusable, enterprise ready, dynamically utilizing the advanced enterprise ready core competencies of our market research. At this point 2.0 is driven entirely on marketing's designs, as we haven't gotten engineering's feedback on the specs. yet.

BINGO!!!!!

I would have won much earlier if you had used "paradigm shift" or "synergy" or "target validation"............
but an excellent interactive feature nonetheless.
 
Hi everyone, sorry to take an aeon to respond to stuff.

celerystalker said:
YOU ARE SUCH A DORK! I love it!
Hey! I resemble that remark.

kpk89 said:
Hey Sillys, good to see you're not listening to Marketing. Their way would have you all cookie-cuttered and ordinary. Your way has Mr. Silly getting promoted each time he edits!
I listen to marketing, it's just that I then do whatever I want afterwards.

cabanafrau said:
Now, would you be adverse to throwing in a few asides referencing your speculation regarding theories and properties of gravity & the fascination/preservation of truly superior yeast strains in the interest of yielding consistent & spectacular beers to gild the lily for me just a little?
Well, I am not a home brewer. I use yeast & sugar water to make CO2 for my aquarium to help the plants grow, but I throw away the liquid. But perhaps I can fake it :)

blue_river said:
Well thank you for that, eh?
Always happy to oblige, eh?

Backstage_Gal said:
Thank you for keeping it up! Wating for the next part now
So H. has the next segment, so we are waiting for comments. I am working on the one after that off & on. I probably will run out of material, and will wind up being all serious and dignified eventually.

UtahMama said:
I toad-ally agree aboot Disneyland being amazingly better in many respects.
DisneyLand is so great. It's so different there in some ways. So much less spread out.

UtahMama said:
You out-did yourselves. THIS will be on the all-time top 10 TR's guaranteed!
Thanks!

jamal said:
Did you read The Physician by Noah Gordon?
No, but I looked it up on Amazon. It looks cool.

jamal said:
Don't quit your day job. Do you HAVE a day job?
I have a day job, thank goodness, which doesn't involve rapping.

TwinkieMama said:
BINGO!!!!!

I would have won much earlier if you had used "paradigm shift" or "synergy" or "target validation"............
but an excellent interactive feature nonetheless.
We have one manager at work in CA who is *always* slinging the buzzwords. We have printed out buzzword bingo sheets a few times. And also played the game of trying to casually throw as many meaningless buzzwords as possible into phone meetings to see if he would notice. Stuff like instead of saying "yes," saying "I'm glad we're on the same page. We need to be dynamically proactive at applying best practices to validate our paradigm of a customer-focused target." He never has noticed.
 
Ok somehow I got behind :confused3 I just spent four lifetimes reading and realized you still had another installment up.

But - can I just move into your house, for the rap alone. :lmao:

And the references to other thingys - well full on freaking funny

And I think I did pick a bad day to quit drinking :rotfl2:

You both crack me up. The next little chapter will have to wait. I gotta eat after all of that. I have a hankering for lemonade. And someone really needs to go to the Say No to Drugs program :teeth:
 
Hey Sillys!

Loved your short sentence forgotten hat & Bagallini montage. Not-so-much the ignored slimy brown lettuce in the bottom of your crisper-drawer metaphor. But loved everything else.

Looking forward to some park time an whatever else your girlie-diary has to say.


(Very funny as usual, Homey!)
 
Me again. Caught up now. Haley waiting at the bus stop. Seems I might have witnessed this once or thirty times. Nice to know what was going on behind the scenes.

Luckily I love creme brulee, but refuse to use the fancy typing carp :rotfl:
 
Your juxtaposition of the hoity-toity "creme brulee" with the colloquial "rama" has me in stitches. Yes indeed. If only Chester and Hester's Dino-Rama were so elegantly executed.

What's a baggalini?
 

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