close
Klassy

Last seen: 4 days ago

Klassy is a 26 year old woman from San Francisco, California, USA

I recently married my lover & best friend in San Francisco. Words are not enough to express the joy, bravery and serenity I feel right now. My life is forever changed.

>> I merely copy & paste! <<

my Anna Karina fansite & my photoblog & my facebook & my lifestream

  • ‘Significant amount' of water found on moon -...

    Rated Nov 15 4 reviews space exploration msn.com

    Well there you have it. It seems there is water on the moon after all. And gallons of it, actually.
  • Gossip Girl -- TV Episode Recaps & News

    Rated Nov 12 1 review tv, gossip girl nymag.com

    You really cannot say that you know me well enough if you still don't know that I am a self-confessed, avid, salivating-Pavolvian-dog-follower of the television show, Gossip Girl. This riveting farce of a teen soap opera centers on the lives and many immoralities of a group of teenagers living ze good life in the Upper East Side of New York City. What draws me to this show from the very first season -- aside from the show's impeccable, spot-on fashion sense -- is that it doesn't apologize for its heightened reality at all.

    Gossip Girl is as if Edith Wharton's novels "The House of Mirth", Whit Stillman's films "Metropolitan" and "The Last Days of Disco", and the themes explored in Eric Rohmer's "Six Moral Tales" series got together and had a baby.

    But unlike most teen dramas and comedies that have had to someday make the transition from high school to college, like 90210 or The O.C. for example, Gossip Girl knows the kind of show it is and wants to become. It doesn't fail with identity crisis issues at all. Every element of the show from the Gilded Age archaic characters down to the episode titles (which is a reference or a deconstruction of famous movie titles, such as Victor/Victrola, Hi Society, The Blair Bitch Project, Desperately Seeking Serena, In the Realm of the Basses, You've Got Yale, The Wrath of Con, The Last Days of Disco Stick) is an intelligent Edith Wharton revamp, delivered tongue in cheek with all the artifice you can ever want and cannot take.

    There. Have I convinced all of you reading this enough to want to watch the show now? Perhaps I'm over-thinking it, but not as much as this guy.

    Or this columnist for New York Magazine, whom I love reading so much that I have thumbed up every single page on the archive.

    I thumbed this up and every page published in this column because, every Tuesday, the first thing I do is check this column for my morning-after Gossip Girl fix. These blow-by-blow recaps per episode are conveniently delivered with the bite of satire.

    A must-read supplement for every fan of the show, like the pill you take the morning after a wild night of debauchery.
  • UCB- Big Red Cat in Hospital

    Rated Nov 11 1 review satire, video youtube.com

    You know what, Upright Citizens Brigade (despite its short-lived run on television) had so much underlying, hilarious social commentary. This sketch is a good example, which pokes fun at the current state of the U.S. health care system.


  • UCB: Titular Line Guy

    Rated Nov 11 4 reviews satire, video youtube.com

    Full of win. My favorite sketch on Upright Citizens Brigade. This underrated series was good while it lasted, but I feel it still needs a wider audience beyond its cult following. This is why I am thumbing it up.


  • She &Him - You Really Got a Hold On Me MTV Canada

    Rated Nov 01 2 reviews music, video youtube.com

    So I'm convinced that Zooey Deschanel, who is also in my top style crush list, is almost the Anna Karina of our generation. (And it's not just because of the bangs.) And by saying that she is "almost Anna Karina," I truly mean it in the best possible way, because the fact remains true to this day: that Anna Karina is still THE Anna Karina of all time, of every generation, and of generations to come. But still, I see this video (as if I don't already check her and her flair for fashion regularly in dozens of who-wears-what fashionista blogs), and....

    I dig it. Love, actually.


  • YouTube - schmoyohos Channel

    Rated Oct 25 5 reviews blogs youtube.com

    Auto-Tune the News simply works. Not just because it's funny (and it is!), but because nothing quite excites the brain like audio, besides text. The only difference is that audio enables some layering of cut-ups in a way that text can't quite reach. Auto-tuning, of course, does not fit with rap or vocal music like the horrid trend that we have now in our current pop culture. But, you know what, it seems to work with the news, with the vibrational reinforcement through the principle of heterodyning. Auto-tuning the news works because it is rooted in the very questionable but seemingly effective nature of disseminating and presenting the traditional news format: it delivers the recursive reinforcement of the material to an increased effect.
  • The Symphony of Science - Spreading scientific knowledge...

    Rated Oct 25 28 reviews science symphonyofscience.com

    Because our material world is founded on vibrations in a vacuum.
  • Created Oct 25

    "We must make an idol of our fear, and call it God."
    - Antonius Block, in a line from Ingmar Bergman's The Seventh Seal
  • Richard Carrier - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Rated Oct 25 1 review writing wikipedia.org


    Richard Carrier has one of the best, most moving answers to Pascal's Wager type of questions. I just have to give him a thumbs up for sharing this line of thought, which struck a chord with my own sentiments. See the dialogue below:



    Question: "Let me give you a scenario. You're dead. [...] And you find yourself in hell, and you're being roasted on a pit. [...] Don't you wish you would've believed? It would've been so easy just to believe."


    Richard Carrier: "Well, no, because it wouldn't really be any better. If I had to sit in heaven forever knowing that there are these people -- millions and millions and, probably, billions of people --- suffering these eternal horrible torments, and there was nothing I could ever do for them...that to me would be hell."



    - interview excerpt from The God Who Wasn't There documentary