LazBro
Prolific Poster
Posts: 10,278
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Post by LazBro on Dec 18, 2015 15:07:28 GMT -5
Go on, what's some really nerdy shit you've done? I'm looking for grand scale nerdery here.
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Post by Ben Grimm on Dec 18, 2015 15:08:05 GMT -5
Joined here?
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LazBro
Prolific Poster
Posts: 10,278
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Post by LazBro on Dec 18, 2015 15:14:20 GMT -5
This is the Paramount Theatre in Seattle. It opened in 1928 as a place to see silent movies and vaudeville shows. At the time it was described as one of the most opulent, beautiful theaters in existence, and the effect of sitting in a seat surrounded by that lavish architecture is striking to this day. It's gorgeous, really. A few years ago, I sat in that very balcony and watched four men on the stage play D&D to a live audience, complete with live music from comedy rock band Paul and Storm. One of the players: Wil Wheaton.
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Post by pairesta on Dec 18, 2015 15:26:27 GMT -5
You're not allowed to win your own thread, Snape.
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Post by pairesta on Dec 18, 2015 15:28:27 GMT -5
I regaled this little tidbit on AVClub once, and the late great Lux Lisbon told me it was the saddest, nerdiest thing she'd ever heard:
At some point in my 20s, when I could have been out to all manner of debauchery instead, I spent a New Years eve playing Star Wars trivial pursuit with a friend instead. I went first, and got half the pies before I got a question wrong (which hand does Luke use his lightsaber in).
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Baron von Costume
TI Forumite
Like an iron maiden made of pillows... the punishment is decadence!
Posts: 4,683
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Post by Baron von Costume on Dec 18, 2015 16:19:07 GMT -5
I regaled this little tidbit on AVClub once, and the late great Lux Lisbon told me it was the saddest, nerdiest thing she'd ever heard: At some point in my 20s, when I could have been out to all manner of debauchery instead, I spent a New Years eve playing Star Wars trivial pursuit with a friend instead. I went first, and got half the pies before I got a question wrong (which hand does Luke use his lightsaber in). NYE sucks anyway, I'm pretty sure my fave new year's eve ever (other than the year I spent it floating in the pool at a mexican resort.) was just chilling out a few years back with old friends getting incredibly drunk and having a super cutthroat mario party extravaganza.
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Post by Ron Howard Voice on Dec 18, 2015 16:21:25 GMT -5
At some point in my 20s, when I could have been out to all manner of debauchery instead, Hmmmm... what is this "debauchery" you speak of?
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Baron von Costume
TI Forumite
Like an iron maiden made of pillows... the punishment is decadence!
Posts: 4,683
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Post by Baron von Costume on Dec 18, 2015 16:23:55 GMT -5
I guess with that I have to make my uber nerdery confession.
Once when I was a younger lad and during a particularly terrible summer was doing very little but work at the grocery store and play everquest I hit some sort of overkill moment and while driving with some friends to go gambing at the race track I became momentarily convinced that we were going the wrong way because the clouds always move east to west (which they did in OG Norrath in EQ)
10 seconds later I wanted to give myself a wedgie.
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repulsionist
TI Forumite
actively disinterested
Posts: 3,684
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Post by repulsionist on Dec 18, 2015 16:55:17 GMT -5
Collected explicit runs of John Byrne comics throughout the 80s in hopes of striking it rich in later adolescence. Also, I have been to the Paramount Theatre in Seattle. I saw a ukelele concert.
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Ice Cream Planet
AV Clubber
I get glimpses of the horror of normalcy.
Posts: 3,833
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Post by Ice Cream Planet on Dec 18, 2015 17:27:26 GMT -5
Writing my undergraduate thesis on British television.
Skipping my senior prom in favor of a Billy Wilder film marathon. I'm still pleased with that decision.
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Post by Judkins Moaner on Dec 18, 2015 18:15:33 GMT -5
Is this about Star Wars?
I've had a good many of these, I reckon; highest I ever scored, I suppose, was owning something like 80 or 90 percent of the classic Doctor Who story novelizations from Target Books (my dad often took us to the comic book store on Wednesdays when we spent the night at his place and I'd usually get those). I later delivered them to my fan friend in a massive garbage bag. She hadn't been expecting so many.
Recently, as part of my drawing/comic projects, I ordered a couple of those Osprey Men-at-Arms military costume series which some of you may have seen back in the day in hobby places or the dustier corners of independent bookstores where sweaty, bearded guys occasionally congregated.* One of them was Armies of the Caliphates, 862-1098; I'm working on a comic set in some mishmash of Carolingian France and Umayyad Spain, and expect both the color plates and the commentary (which isn't as helpful post, say, nineteenth-century) to be useful. So not only was it a great moment in personal nerdery, but I also expect I've wound up on some sort of government registry (and it won't stop there; there's Armies of Islam, 7th-11th Centuries, and one on the Moors specifically, both of them by the great David Nicolle, that I'll be ordering in the next couple of weeks).
*I bought Hungary and the Fall of Eastern Europe, 1000-1568, back in my Barnes and Noble days, and my co-workers gave each other condescending stares behind the register as I did so, one of them sniffing, "I always wondered who bought these."
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Post by nowimnothing on Dec 18, 2015 18:34:59 GMT -5
I waited in line for 13 hours to get tickets for The Phantom Menace.
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Post by songstarliner on Dec 18, 2015 19:12:44 GMT -5
I waited in line for 13 hours to get tickets for The Phantom Menace. I "liked" it, but it's still such a sad story.
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Post by MrsLangdonAlger on Dec 18, 2015 19:23:41 GMT -5
I seduced a man by bringing him home and showing him the Secret Cow Level in Diablo II. Then I got so into playing it that I made him wait for sex for like an hour.
That first sentence sounds like weird innuendo. It isn't.
Also, two years later I dumped the same dude because he was less interesting than a mod character I had on the game of Baldur's Gate II I was playing.
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Post by Roy Batty's Pet Dove on Dec 18, 2015 19:46:33 GMT -5
Collected explicit runs of John Byrne comics throughout the 80s in hopes of striking it rich in later adolescence. Did you strike it rich?
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Post by Ron Howard Voice on Dec 18, 2015 20:46:42 GMT -5
In the 5th grade, when we were all assigned to go to the FOURTH grade history class and teach the 4th graders about ancient Roman history. There were 3-4 of us students, and we divided up the story of ancient Rome among each of us...I was supposed to go next-to-last and go sort of from AD 100 to when Rome really started to fall apart and collapse. Then the last person was going to talk about the fall of Rome and all the barbarians and stuff.
Also: The last person to go was my first crush.
But when I started talking, I got SO EXCITED about ancient Rome and the decline and fall, and naming all the different kinds of Goths, that I just kept on talking until Rome was vanquished and Charlemagne was on the rise and the Byzantines were separated. And then I said "That's the story of Rome!" and turned and saw her, oh dear cute 5th grade crush, staring at me like "Wha?"
At the time it seemed to be the worst moment of my entire life.
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Post by Judkins Moaner on Dec 18, 2015 21:55:46 GMT -5
But when I started talking, I got SO EXCITED about ancient Rome and the decline and fall, and naming all the different kinds of Goths, that I just kept on talking until Rome was vanquished and Charlemagne was on the rise and the Byzantines were separated. And then I said "That's the story of Rome!" and turned and saw her, oh dear cute 5th grade crush, staring at me like "Wha?" This was me, 6th grade. Not only was I hopelessly "in love" with a girl in my class (who I hadn't seen since first grade and who remembered I was interested in explorers), but I also had a crush on my teacher. That was one awesome, tortuous world history class.
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Post by Desert Dweller on Dec 18, 2015 22:54:53 GMT -5
I own three different Star Wars-edition Mr Potato Heads. Which I bought while at Disneyland. Three years ago.
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Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
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Post by Deleted on Dec 19, 2015 0:28:00 GMT -5
I waited in line for 13 hours to get tickets for The Phantom Menace. I waited in line 18 hours for the Wii. Me and my friend showed up like 5 hours before anyone else got there. It is by far my best experience while in High School(helps that like the first six people in line were all from my HS).
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Post-Lupin
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Immanentizing the Eschaton
Posts: 5,673
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Post by Post-Lupin on Dec 19, 2015 7:15:05 GMT -5
At some point in my 20s, when I could have been out to all manner of debauchery instead, Hmmmm... what is this "debauchery" you speak of? Ask your mum. As you can guess, I have a lot of possibilities here... I'll settle for this one: me and Terry Pratchett, at WorldCon in Glasgow, drunkenly dueting the theme from The Return Of Captain Invincible.
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Post-Lupin
Prolific Poster
Immanentizing the Eschaton
Posts: 5,673
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Post by Post-Lupin on Dec 19, 2015 7:15:57 GMT -5
I waited in line for 13 hours to get tickets for The Phantom Menace. I "liked" it, but it's still such a sad story. The TI
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Dellarigg
AV Clubber
This is a public service announcement - with guitars
Posts: 7,634
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Post by Dellarigg on Dec 19, 2015 8:57:01 GMT -5
I was just in a high street record shop that was playing a video of The Beatles with the sound off. By the length of their hair, I estimated the footage to be from 1965, and the song was probably Ticket To Ride.
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Post by ganews on Dec 19, 2015 10:27:50 GMT -5
I keep a copy of the periodic table in my wallet. In college I had in my regular bookbag a little booklet of the Constitution, Dec. of Independence, some Federalist Papers, etc.
I joined the American Chemical Society just so I could get their periodic table blanket. In my defense, my company paid the membership dues.
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Tellyfier
TI Pariah
Unwarned and dangerous
Posts: 2,552
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Post by Tellyfier on Dec 19, 2015 11:09:26 GMT -5
I got up early on a Sunday to see a Double Feature Matineé of Blood Feast and Two Thousand Maniacs by Herschell Gordon Lewis.
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Invisible Goat
Shoutbox Elitist
Grab your mother's keys, we're leaving
Posts: 2,644
Member is Online
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Post by Invisible Goat on Dec 19, 2015 11:11:29 GMT -5
I don't even remember what project it was for or what good it could have possibly done, but for something in middle school I drew an extremely detailed map of Middle Earth on like a 24x36 foamboard. I wish I still had it, it's a pain to fold out Tolkien's version from the back of my hardbacks all the time.
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Dellarigg
AV Clubber
This is a public service announcement - with guitars
Posts: 7,634
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Post by Dellarigg on Dec 19, 2015 12:11:02 GMT -5
I have a book of Springsteen lyrics, and if anyone wants to open it at random and read a line, I'll tell you what song it's from.
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Post by Hugs and Hisses on Dec 19, 2015 12:48:59 GMT -5
I have a blue ribbon at home from when I dipped a toe into the seedy underbelly of... [nerdy drumroll please]... competitive cross stitching.
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Post by ganews on Dec 19, 2015 13:21:01 GMT -5
I have a blue ribbon at home from when I dipped a toe into the seedy underbelly of... [nerdy drumroll please]... competitive cross stitching. I designed, and had a friend build, a shelf for Lifemate to display her ribbons and awards from entering knitting and spinning competitions at fairs and festivals.
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Post by Liz n Dicksgiving on Dec 19, 2015 13:42:38 GMT -5
I designed, and had a friend build, a shelf for Lifemate to display her ribbons and awards from entering knitting and spinning competitions at fairs and festivals. I really, really want to meet Lifemate. She's a spinner? An award-winning spinner? That's so awesome! That's one handcraft that has eluded me; many years ago I traveled to a weekend spinning workshop with my mother*, and neither of us did very well at it. We've whined that just about all the other fibercrafty artisan things we can do -- knitting, stitching, quilting, tatting, weaving... but not spinning. [/sad trombone] One thing I managed to learn in that workshop, though, was that the term "spinster" came from how spinning was a chore that would be given to the old unmarried aunt who was too weak to do heavy homestead labor and too uselessly childless to do the childrearing. As a proud modern spinster I wish I could spin, because it would be fun to be able to connect with my spiritual forebears. *Hey! I think I just found my greatest moment in personal nerdery! Heh. Although I don't think I'm at all a nerd. I'm a dork. There's a big difference.
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Post by Lt. Broccoli on Dec 19, 2015 13:54:05 GMT -5
My high school had a "Reach For The Top" (Canadian high school version of Quiz Bowl) team, *and* a curling team, and I was on both of them.
I joined both because of a girl who I never ended up with, of course.
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