Why I want to consume "Sublime Stitching: Hundreds of Hip Embroidery Patterns and How-To" — 3 years ago
It has tons of patterns and a pocket to put them all in the back!

progoddess / Rachel
is consuming 2238 items,
doing 32 things,
going 7 places, and
meeting 6 people.
I'm currently reading 1078 books, listening to 43 albums, watching 1112 movies, eating and drinking 2 food items, and consuming 3 other things.
It has tons of patterns and a pocket to put them all in the back!
Really cute and has a great suprise appearance by a young, frizzy haired Joan Cusak.
Can you say “melodramatic”?
Something always compels me to read Fannie Flagg’s books when they come out. I am powerless to resist.
Totally unscientific and slanted. Spurlock’s approach is seriously flawed and he doesn’t seem to have a grasp on basic science. Um, putting McDonald’s food in glass jars will show us how it breaks down in our bodies? Even a first grader knows about stomach acid.
I also feel like he is preying on the same lack of general knowlege of nutrition, health and science that he blames the food industry for. Critical thinkers and those with even rudimentry health knowledge could rip his whole “experiment” apart.
Totally reactionary and without any solutions offered.
And are the people he says are most in danger even watching this? Can they afford the ticket?
This was awful. Disjointed and the timeline was off. The kid was supposed to have already graduated college in 1984 but his dad said that he was in college “ending the war” with would have been impossible. The kid would have been born in roughly 1966 and since the dad was a lawyer, I some how doubt he had a kid in high school. It was also very predictable. I knew he was going to leave the punk lifestyle from the moment he opened his mouth. I also wish it had more to do with being punk in a Morman culture. It really could have been set any where in the midwest. And frankly, I was impressed with the number of punks, mods and other fringe groups in Salt Lake City. I live in a much less religious large city and we have nothing like that.
I really enjoyed this documentry. I liked how Shelby was able to stand up to people in authority and speak her views. I liked the fact that even though she was religious, she didn’t force that on other people and could really empatize with others. I also liked how even though her parents had different beliefs, they still supported her and attended rallys and things.
Cute but very few ideas I could actually see anyone making.
Is it just me or did it take a turn for a bizarre about 45 minutes in? What was that scene when Jodie Foster said the mom’s boyfriend wore white shoes and the mom flipped out and moved?
and the blonde girl’s tattoo that moved from shoulder to shoulder?
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