Links of great humour
Aug. 17th, 2009 12:56 pmInstead of writing a book review, I'm link-hopping.
I read this interview in today's Guardian. It's an interview with A-Ha (you know, the guys who got a new lease of life with the literal video version of 'Take On Me') and is hilarious. The interview wanders into Spinal Tap territory on several occasions (highlights include the band members arguing about the merits of various translations of Kierkegaard). I wish all newspaper interviews could be that good!
Yesterday Felicia Day posted this link on Twitter. (Come on, you know you want to!) It's photoshopped images of 23 film plots that could've been solved in seconds. Great stuff.
Finally,
ellevee posted some great Star Trek (new!trek) macros. They use 10 Things I Hate About You quotes, so they're clearly reaching stratospheric levels of awesome.
( Macros behind the cut )
I think she originally found them on
ontd_startrek.
Now I'm off to read Annabel Crabb tweet Question Time. That is as geeky as it sounds, but nowhere near as boring. Annabel is a family friend, and one of the best, and funniest political journalists in Australia. Her tweets are like Australian politics in a bottle, and a joy to read. If you're not following her yet, you should.
I read this interview in today's Guardian. It's an interview with A-Ha (you know, the guys who got a new lease of life with the literal video version of 'Take On Me') and is hilarious. The interview wanders into Spinal Tap territory on several occasions (highlights include the band members arguing about the merits of various translations of Kierkegaard). I wish all newspaper interviews could be that good!
Yesterday Felicia Day posted this link on Twitter. (Come on, you know you want to!) It's photoshopped images of 23 film plots that could've been solved in seconds. Great stuff.
Finally,
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-userinfo.gif)
( Macros behind the cut )
I think she originally found them on
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-community.gif)
Now I'm off to read Annabel Crabb tweet Question Time. That is as geeky as it sounds, but nowhere near as boring. Annabel is a family friend, and one of the best, and funniest political journalists in Australia. Her tweets are like Australian politics in a bottle, and a joy to read. If you're not following her yet, you should.