Both are good, but you can do more (in fact, anything) with a small budget in animation, so I'll go with that.
Ralph Wiggum or Butters?
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Both are good, but you can do more (in fact, anything) with a small budget in animation, so I'll go with that.
Ralph Wiggum or Butters?
Butters
Documentary or movie based on a true story?
Well, if I'm trying to make a critical historical judgment, I wouldn't go near anything "based on a true story." And if I want art or entertainment, playing the history nerd is is going to be self-defeating in the extreme. So it's really apples and oranges.
Sunny cheerful day or romantic night of warm, windswept rain?
Definitely the rain at night
Autumn or Spring?
Autumn
Summer or Winter?
Winter
Clown or Ventriloquist Dummy?
Ventriloquist's dummy's are funnier!
Stage play or movie?
Movie.
Audiobook or talkie style podcast?
I listen to two podcasts (actually just old podcast archives) and no audiobooks, so pods, I guess.
Edit: sorry, wrong game!
Um, toast or croissants?
Ugh don't even mention croissants to me, I would love to eat them for every meal, nothing but.
Bacon, ham or breakfast sausage with your breakfast?
Oh, and what podcasts do you listen to if you don't mind my asking?
Bacon, please.
One is Terry Gross' Fresh Air--way too left wing for me, but I like the author interviews. The other is called The Brass Figlagee, and is basically an archive of Jean Shepherd's old radio show from the 50s though the 70s. Shepherd was a commentator and story teller. He's mostly forgotten now, except that the movie A Christmas Story was based on some of his short stories. I listened to him in the late 70s, when he was way over the hill. Some of his stuff is pretty dated now, but some isn't. And it's all a kind of time travel.
How many podcasts would you recommend and which are they?
I don't listen to any, that's why I asked you! Maybe it was on here but someone recommended a Ulysses podcast to help with reading the book but I don't remember what it's called, and I think you dislike Joyce? I listened to some British literature podcast for awhile which I liked but I forget what that was called too.
You ever read The Golden Bough? Should I read it next?
Yes, I read and liked it. I'm not sure I'd recommend it next, though. Frazier's ideas are almost all out of date, and no one believes that business about the new king killing the old king anymore. But in supporting these ideas he collected a vast amount of really cool lore that survived from "pagan" Europe--wrenning, May queens, Old Christmas, fertility poles, all that kind of stuff. But his ideas are fun. If you've got the time to mine the fact from the fiction, then go ahead. But it's long, so if you really intend to finish it, I'd wait till the dead of winter, when there's not a lot else to do. Or at least knock off all the small novels on your plate for now. But, you know, do what you like.
Veal or chicken parm (and why)?
Oh I'm only interested in it as literature/folklore, not some sort or anthropology textbook.
Chicken parm because I've never had veal parm, I'm sure both are great though.
Pasta dishes or rice dishes?
Pasta
Italy or France for a holiday (vacation)?