It's My Party and I'll Complain If I Want To Complaint Thread
This discussion has been closed.
Adding to Cart…
Licensing Agreement | Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | EULA
© 2026 Daz Productions Inc. All Rights Reserved.You currently have no notifications.
Licensing Agreement | Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | EULA
© 2026 Daz Productions Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Comments
crap shoot has something to do with dice game i think
I'm not a fan of opera. Tried it a few times. Meh.
But never had trouble opening it.
That being said, I've also never been to an opera opening either. But I have been to a few operas. For some reason I seemed to end up at "Marriage of Figaro" at the Kennedy Center or other venues a surprising number of times (3).
It's not bad for an opera. I went so many times because I was either being taken to the opera, or I was taking someone to the opera. And it'a pretty safe one to see, at least the music was Mozart.
I also made it to Puccini's comic opera "Gianni Schicchi" at a theater on the campus of Georgetown University. Friend of mine from work was in it. Meh.
We also saw "Phantom of the Opera" in London but that doesn't really count as an "opera".
I've seen Gilbert & Sullivan's "The Mikado" a couple times.
Oh, and one more. We saw Rimsky-Korsakov's "Млада" ("Mlada") performed by the Bolshoi Opera Company at Woftrap west of Washington DC. 
I just don't get jazzed up about opera. I like the great music from some of them but I find it terribly tedious to have to watch the stupid plots and listen to all the ungreat music they also contain. And I positively detest the screeching women in some of them (especially Wagner). I just don't know why people think screeching like a drowning banshee is good music. "It ain't over until the fat lady screeches." -- apologies to Anonymous. I get my doses of Wagner as music only. I've got a great CD called "Wagner Without Words".
There's a fabulous speech made by a famous female opera singer and she condenses the plot of one of her operas to a short hilarious expose of the innanity of it. If you know of it or if I find it, I'll bring it up again sometime.
DIDN'T FIND IT: At least not the one I was looking for but here's something similar and funny. Summarizing the whole obscenely long (20 hour) series of Wagner operas known as The Ring Cycle. . https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cv7G92F2sqs
Oops, I completely forgot my most incredible opera experience. Same time period that we were in London, we were also in Amsterdam and I saw that Verdi's "Aida" (pronounced Eye-eeda) was playing there. I stopped at a ticket booth somewhere in the middle of old town Amsterdam either Dam Square or near Central Station. That year (1991) the opera company was a fragment of the original HUGE performance that had been staged in front of the Pyramids in Egypt previously. The opera company had split into several sub-companies and started touring various countries around the world. I happened to catch the one in Amsterdam.
The show was performed in an indoor soccer arena called Sporthallen Zuid, south of the city. They used the entire field to stage parts of the show, like for the massing army scene. And there were huge wire frame props representing some of the pyramids and palace architecture. At some points there were fireworks. The number of people in the cast must have been in the hundreds (lots of soldiers). And when the lead female singer made her entrance she came down the aisle of the stadium seats right next to me. She stopped about 1/3 the way down the aisle, right next to me, on the end of the row, and sang her entire aria right there, right next to me. I could have reached out and touched her dress. It was an unforgetable experience, that I forgot to mention in my last post.
I still have the program from that performance and I bought a couple 8x10" glossy photographs of the play too. They're around here somewhere...
Here's the best known song from "Aida": The Triumphal March https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xxgOIwOd_5I
Photo below only shows one of the wireframe "buildings" of the Amsterdam performance, but you get the idea.
You know you are getting old when you forget the unforgettable.
Heh-heh... We got a moderator to talk about number two...
For you flutterby lovers: https://www.facebook.com/Beautifullightscandle/videos/1526297880805086/
This was shared on Facebook. I can't figure out how to snag it to share here. KK, Dana thought you especially should see it.
...thank you. very nice.
1 good thing bout being at dayjob is the a/c
TODAYAUG 17
88°75°
20%
SATAUG 18
86°69°
50%
have ethics required training today.
scat bus got me to work at 20 to 7am today. i don't officially start til 8:30. mebbe if i tell them i need to be at work by 9am they won't make me be awake and ready to leave at 6am.
made an apt for a manicure and a bikini wax tomorrow, wanna be neat for the tattoo artist.
made an apt with a gastro dr. friend told me to keep a food diary and #2 details. is dr really gonna read it?
dreamy voices
more dreamy voices
nostalgia
complaiiiint x2 Dead Eggs

complaaaaaiiiint my lotto win is 509 bucks. dr bill came in, is 489 bucks.
my insurance paid a whole dollar towards carotid test.
sooooo not fair
Speaking of opera and Wagner... Well, I was anyway.
The one piece of Wagner's (pronounced Vahg-ner) music that always gives me shivers up my spine is "Sigfried's Funeral March" from the last of the operas in the ring cycle "Götterdämmerung". It's slow (it's a funeral march... duh!) and it's repetative (um... funeral march!) but when it finally gets to where it's going, it grabs you by the throat and rakes your spine with electrified claws (it's all the horns). 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2fdNBjCBpaA Force yourself... listen from the beginning, let it build (it gets the electrical currents starting to oscillate up and down your spine). The music starts to peak at 3:50 and is dying out by 6:00. Use lots of volume. Imagine you've sat through this hours long performance and have been convinced that you should like the main character (Sigfried), despite all his stupid macho behavior, but he finally screws up and gets killed and this is his exit music.
If you're not a classical music buff but it still sounds familiar you've probably seen Elmer Fudd and Bugs Bunny do it.
wuh oh dust storm on Mars
https://mars.nasa.gov/mer/mission/status_opportunityAll.html
Crap, I got to go into work an hour early. Just when I got word to start working so I can start writing that stupid story.
Ooops I talked about number 2, did I? I meant to say well darn it.
tee hee you said 'crap'

why the 'corn' unicorns?
would unihorse or unipony make more sense?
I think (but not sure) it has something to do with originally Unicorns weren't horses they were a mixture of goat, deer, & lion.they had a goats beard ,deer feet and a lions tail .....
...not quite Blues Brothers calibre but still entertaining.
Unicorn = one horn
Corn here means horn. As in cornet (little horn) or cornucopia (horn of plenty). So uni (one) + corn (horn).
...unicorn:
...bicorn
...tricorn
...cornball
...can o' corn
...corn-nets
.
...ahh, it's that second most favourite day of the week just before Catruday....FishFryDay.
Time to head to the market.
i'se got yummi lettuce for dindin
and a hashbrown heating up on a cookie sheet
...got fishy for frying in the skillet later. Going to try Caribbean styled rice with it this time just for a break.
Well, I think a unihorse would be one horse. That seems redundant. I think unihorn would be more logical. The only other things with the word "corn" in it that refers to something on the head would be bi-corn and tri-corn hats. The horn on a unicorn does not have corners.
But then, the English language often makes no sense, anyway.
Dana
Oh, well that makes some sense!
Dana