THE children whispering and fidgeting in front of the stage at Union
Hall in Park Slope, Brooklyn, looked like any kids awaiting, say, a
storyteller. Then Zora Sicher and Hugo Orozco, the two 11-year-olds who
make up the band Magnolia, climbed onstage and broke into a
hard-driving original song called “Volume.” It was clear this was not
quiet time.
“Wooooo!” a dreadlocked woman shouted from the back of the room, where a crowd of adults, many in vintage concert T-shirts and cardigans, looking like kids themselves, cheered and sipped bloody marys.
For this set of performers and audience members, indie rock is as familiar as a lullaby. “We like punk, classic rock, metal, riot grrrl,” said Hugo, an elfin-face sixth grader from Brooklyn, who was given her first drum set at 7.Pineapple express
Will Oldham show is sold out
I watch Wholphin doc
So I need some practice I'm rusty.
Done with long letters and mysterious packages East, definitely done with Web 2.0 and making a fool out of myself via Web 2.0, too busy with S to knit or sew, unable to garden in the winter, likely 86ed on the potlatch due to aforementioned Web 2.0, I have found a new hobby: haiku. My inspiration. Here's an example (not mine):
"Good drinking game
Guess which college she went to
Brown or Oberlin?"
Etymology: Middle English, partly from past participle of weten to wet & partly from Old English w[AE]t wet; akin to Old Norse vAtr wet, Old English wæter water
1 a : consisting of, containing, covered with, or soaked with liquid (as water) b of natural gas : containing appreciable quantities of readily condensable hydrocarbons
2 : RAINY <wet weather>
3 : still moist enough to smudge or smear <wet paint>
4 a : DRUNK 1a <a wet driver> b : having or advocating a policy permitting the manufacture and sale of alcoholic beverages <a wet county> <a wet candidate>
5 : preserved in liquid
6 : employing or done by means of or in the presence of water or other liquid <wet extraction of copper>
7 : overly sentimental
8 British a : lacking strength of character : WEAK, SPINELESS <thought him wet and violence petrified him -- William Golding> b : belonging to the moderate or liberal wing of the Conservative party
| Pronunciation: 'sOk Function: verb Etymology: Middle English soken, from Old English socian; akin to Old English sucan to suck intransitive verb 1 : to lie immersed in liquid (as water) : become saturated by or as if by immersion 2 a : to enter or pass through something by or as if by pores or interstices : PERMEATE b : to penetrate or affect the mind or feelings -- usually used with in or into 3 : to drink alcoholic beverages intemperately transitive verb 1 : to permeate so as to wet, soften, or fill thoroughly 2 : to place in a surrounding element (as liquid) to wet or permeate thoroughly 3 : to extract by or as if by steeping <soak the dirt out> 4 a : to draw or take in by or as if by suction or absorption <soaked up the sunshine> b : to intoxicate (oneself) by drinking alcoholic beverages 5 : to cause to pay an exorbitant amount |
Function: adjective
1 : being at once bitter and sweet; especially : pleasant but including or marked by elements of suffering or regret <a bittersweet ballad>

I will tell you a story about this (not on here) but I should say that though really romantic, trains... read more
on Are train romances dead?