Entry tags:
Death today....
Just got the news that UGA VI, the mascot for The University of Georgia, died last night.
Today, someone has been killed at Six Flags over Georgia.
I think I'll stay at home. Unless this next storm comes along and knocks over a tree on my house!
Today, someone has been killed at Six Flags over Georgia.
I think I'll stay at home. Unless this next storm comes along and knocks over a tree on my house!
no subject
no subject
no subject
(no subject)
(no subject)
no subject
I mean, I don't think that any mentally stable rival of UGA could go without feeling bad for the (temporary) loss of their mascot (especially the family who cared for the doggy).
Fortunately, like The Doctor, they'll soon enough have a new drooling mass of wobbly flesh panting furiously under the hot sun while veterinarians and FFA reps run around throwing the football, worshipped by good, simple, hardworking people.
It may be exasperatingly provincial, but if it glues a people together, it's good enough for me.
(Bye Bye UGA!!)
no subject
An interesting thing about the University of Georgia bulldog mascots is that they don't reside anywhere near Athens, Georgia. Savannah is about 226 miles from Athens, and on game day the owner of the mascots, Sonny Seiler, flies UGA to the game in his private jet.
Seiler, obviously an extremely enthusiastic alumnus, is a lawyer in Savannah. He was the lawyer for the guy on trial for murder as retold in MIDNIGHT IN THE GARDEN OF GOOD AND EVIL. In fact, Seiler has a cameo in the movie MIDNIGHT IN THE GARDEN OF GOOD AND EVIL (As does one of the UGA bulldawgs, playing its ancestor).
---------------------
As for the kid killed by the rollercoaster, yeah, it was pretty dumb what he did, but for those Internet wags who'll chortle about Darwin Awards, he was a 17-year-old kid who had a momentary failure of perspective. Suddenly his lost hat became the most important thing in the universe. I think I'm smarter than the average bear, but I've done things where later I've thought, "That was pretty stupid, that could have been fatal."
(Several more increasingly bile-filled paragraphs deleted).