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The Stewie strikes back?

Could it be? Family Guy returning to Fox? Please let it be so.

In a sign of the growing importance of DVD sales to Hollywood, 20th Century Fox is considering a plan to resume production of Family Guy, a sometimes crude animated comedy that the Fox network took off the air more than 18 months ago.

As many as 35 new episodes could return in January 2005, marking the first time that a canceled series has been revived based on strong DVD demand and ratings in syndication.

Seriously, Family Guy is one of the funniest… nay, the funniest and most clever thing I’ve seen on television.

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Style watch

Vanity Fair, Dec. 2003Last night on the way home, I stopped to browse at H&M downtown, and found the blue shirt I’ve been looking for. I was so happy. ‘Cause you know I’m obsessed with owning any given piece of clothing in multiple colors. If something fits well, I have to have it in every color available. (Okay, not always, but you get the idea.) When I got home, I told Thom, “I went to H&M, and eureka!” He didn’t miss a beat: “You found the blue shirt?” Bingo. I’m wearing it today. It makes me feel all glamorous, like I’m an editor for, say, Wallpaper or L’Uomo Vogue, and not a dry academic publication… for which I actually am. As Ellen says she’s trying to bring glamor back to daytime television, I suppose I’m trying to bring glamor back to statistical research. Umm, if it ever existed.

Speaking of magazines, do check out the Dec. issue of Vanity Fair. There are a couple of pretty pictures of the casts of Will & Grace, Queer As Folk, Queer Eye, et al., all mixed up, sultry and draped over each other. Yum.

Another item for the virtual wishlist: a new bag. This morning on the bus, Thom and I noticed a pair of guys standing in front of us, each of whom had a cool messenger bag–though I suppose the term “messenger bag” belies their swankness. One was Victorinox (Swiss Army) and the other was Kenneth Cole, which, well, I simply must have. Black leather, slightly textured. Must have. (Okay, we wanted the guy, as well.)

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Mass. court rules on same-sex marriage ban

Breaking news:

BOSTON (Reuters) — The highest court in Massachusetts ruled Tuesday it is unconstitutional for the state to deny marriage to gay and lesbian couples, a move that could make the state the first to legalize same-sex marriages.

In a ruling posted on its website, the Supreme Judicial Court said the state of Massachusetts may not “deny the protections, benefits and obligations conferred by civil marriage to two individuals of the same sex who wish to marry.”

The lawsuit Goodridge v. Department of Public Health was brought by several gay and lesbian couples seeking the right to marry in Massachusetts.

[Update (19 Nov 2003 09:55): More news coverage at Boston.com.]

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Blogrolling, we have a problem

Ack! Looks like someone hacked into Blogrolling–I thought it was just me, but from looking at a few other blogs, I surmise it’s a systemwide thing–so until I find the time to reconstruct my blogroll, I’m taking it down for now.

There goes my lovingly crafted and carefully assembled list of bloggage. Just like that, poof! Grr.

[Update (12:16): Blogrolling seems to be back up and running with blogrolls restored, for now. Whew.]

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Swans to scissorhands

British director-choreographer Matthew Bourne, whose modern staging of Swan Lake you know I love, plans to develop Edward Scissorhands into a dance theater piece. Cool.

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This commute brought to you by…

No, please, no more advertising on the Metro. Right now, the ads in the cathedral-like stations and on the trains are few and widely spaced. Nice. I know Metro is strapped for cash, but draping the train exteriors completely with ads (like you see now on buses) and placing lighted ads inside subway tunnels? Oh, well.

It’s a dramatic departure for a transit system designed by Army generals to appear spic and span. Newsstands and shops have never been permitted inside stations, as they are in other subway systems. Advertising has been banned at Metro-owned bus shelters. And it is illegal on trains to play music without wearing headphones, let alone hang a monitor to broadcast commercials.

“I’ve seen a sea change from an earlier attitude which had this ideal, pristine environment where advertising was the bane of existence to today where you have this panoply of ideas, many of which I consider exciting and appropriate to raise revenue for a system strapped for cash,” said D.C. Council member Jim Graham (D-Ward 1), who chairs the Metro board.

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Come and knock on our door

Thom’s right. I’m less personal here in my journal than he sometimes is in his. I can think of only a couple of entries in which I’ve written about our relationship specifically. But that’s just me. He wondered if I was okay with him writing about our living together, which yes, I’m cool about. I appreciate him asking me.

So, as you’ve probably already read over at his site, yes, we are effectively, de facto, how you say, ah yes: shacking up. I am happy.

Now to think about a major concern in any co-habitational relationship: will our TiVos get along?

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Superfriday

Because I can’t really think of anything to write about at this very moment, I’ve been going through some old Friday Five archives. So here are some selected questions and answers, i.e. each set doesn’t necessarily include all five questions:

31 Oct 2003

What was your first Halloween costume?
I think it was Big Bird. It was pretty cute, I have to say. Imagine me, a little kindergartener, as Big Bird.

What was your best costume and why?
When I got a little bit older, I was a vampire for a few years running. Got a lot of mileage out of that. I had my mom make me a cape of black satin. Ah, those fun trips to the fabric store with my mom, paging through pattern books and poring over bolts of fabrics. (She should’ve seen the signs, eh? Oh, I’m suddenly reminded of a Post article a while back about a teenager who’s fashioned a following–their pun, not mine–by designing homecoming dresses for girls at his school.) Anyway, yeah, by this point, I was like, none of those ready-made plastic costumes for me.

Share your favorite scary story… real or legend!
I remember having Poe’s The Masque of the Red Death read to our camp group in the fifth grade. Totally scared me.

10 Oct 2003

Do you watch sports? If so, which ones?
I’ve found that most of the sports I enjoy watching are judged subjectively: diving, figure skating, etc. As much as I like figure skating, I’ll admit that I don’t know whether to think of it really as a sport, rather than exclusively as an art, like ballet, say. It’s physically challenging, no doubt about that, but I watch it for its performing arts sake than for the competition aspect of it. Other than that, I do watch football and tennis from time to time.

What/who are your favorite sports teams and/or favorite athletes?
Since I don’t follow teams or individual athletes at all, it’s hard to say. But my default homecity team, the 49ers, always get my support.

Are there any sports you hate?
Umm, no, there aren’t any sports I hate. There might be some that I’m not inclined to watch (basketball is too frenetic, and baseball too slow), but hate, no.

Do/did you play any sports (in school or other)? How long did you play?
As a kid I played tennis, just very leisurely, and not very well.

12 Sept 2003

Is the name you have now the same name that’s on your birth certificate? If not, what’s changed?
Yes, exactly the same.

If you could change your name (first, middle, and/or last), what would it be?
Well, my only quibble is that my middle name is Steve, not Stephen. It doesn’t bug me enough to actually change it legally. I used to wish a little that my first and middle names were Spanish, to flow more with my last name, but in the end, I do like Jeff. I’m not completely fond of my last name, but I’ve grown to be okay with it. I used to get teased–not just by kids, but also by otherwise sane adults who thought they were being funny and good-natured–and only until I got to college did a few people say it was kind of a cool name.

Are there any names you really hate or love? What are they and why?
Lately I’m into classically evocative names: Leander, Tristan, Sebastian, and the like. There’s something unique and timeless about them.

Is the analysis of your name at kabalarians.com / triggur.org / astroexpert accurate? How or how isn’t it?
Kabalarians.com says

Jeffrey as a first name gives you a very independent nature, yet you are friendly, approachable, and generous. You can be a spontaneous, expressive, and talkative person. Generally you are good-natured, though at times you can be rather blunt and sarcastic. This name incorporates creative, artistic, and musical abilities, and there would be an element of originality in all that you do. You like to do things on the spur of the moment without planning or prior arrangements. Your spirits are buoyed up greatly by encouragement and appreciation.

Eh, I don’t know. I suppose it’s mostly right, but to me it’s like reading a horoscope. Grain of salt and all that.

5 Sept 2003

What housekeeping chore(s) do you hate doing the most?
Anything requiring a bucket of water. Then again, washing the car, provided there’s nice weather, is all right.

Are there any that you like or don’t mind doing?
I actually find doing the dishes or laundry kind of therapeutic. And with the advent of disposable dust cloths–those things are great–I don’t mind dusting either.

Do you have a routine throughout the week or just clean as it’s needed?
When I lived with my parents, I’d do laundry usually on Saturday mornings. In college, I’d clean as needed, and the only routine I abided by was taking out recyclables on Friday afternoons. And now, it’s anybody’s guess. Thom can vouch for my habits when I’m at his place. As for my own place, bring a mining helmet with a light.