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[challenge entry] Quick and Filthy...'CALL THE COPS!'

From the Nick Griffin challenge. See all 264 entries (closed)

(, Mon 15 Jun 2009, 15:30, archived)
# Fucking no.
(, Mon 15 Jun 2009, 15:30, archived)
# My poor eyes :'(
(, Mon 15 Jun 2009, 15:31, archived)
# My poor employment...
(, Mon 15 Jun 2009, 15:32, archived)
# Did I miss a nawty?
(, Mon 15 Jun 2009, 15:41, archived)
# Click the link, snugglybum.
(, Mon 15 Jun 2009, 15:42, archived)
# erm...
(, Mon 15 Jun 2009, 15:31, archived)
# I for one welcome our evil mod overlord censoring!
(, Mon 15 Jun 2009, 15:38, archived)
# I get back from Download festival, sunburnt and broken and this is the first thing I see?
FUCK YOU, INTERNET.
(, Mon 15 Jun 2009, 15:31, archived)
# *facepalms*

(, Mon 15 Jun 2009, 15:32, archived)
# No.
Michael Tritter is a recurring character in the medical drama series House, portrayed by David Morse. He is the main antagonist of the third season, which ran between 2006 and 2007. Tritter is a police detective, who tries to get Dr. Gregory House (Hugh Laurie) to apologize for leaving him in an examination room with a thermometer in his rectum. After House refuses to do so, Tritter researches House's background and discovers the doctor's Vicodin addiction. Tritter turns people close to House against him and forces House to go to rehab. When the case ultimately comes to court, the judge sentences House to one night in jail and finishing his rehabilitation, telling Tritter that she believes House is not the drug addict he tried to make him out to be. The character was created as somebody who could go "toe-to-toe" with House. Morse, who had never seen the show before, was unsure if he would portray the character and was not impressed after familiarizing himself with the show. The excited reaction of his friends to the acting opportunity finally convinced him to take the role. Initial critical responses to the character were mostly positive, but critics later felt that the seven-episode Tritter story arc became "boring". However, Morse was praised for his portrayal, and gained an Outstanding Guest Actor in a Drama Series Emmy Award nomination for his appearance in the episode "Finding Judas". Morse stated in a 2006 TV Guide interview that, although he had discussed it with writers of the show, bringing the character back on the show would be "practically impossible".
(, Mon 15 Jun 2009, 15:32, archived)
# However...
Bless This House centres around life in Birch Avenue, Putney, where travelling stationery salesman Sid Abbott and his wife Jean live with their teenage children, Mike, who is fresh from art college and more preoccupied with protests than finding a job, and Sally, a trendy schoolgirl. The children are 18 and 16 years old at the start of the series. Sid and Jean constantly battle to comprehend the permissive ways of the new generation and are usually out of touch. Their neighbours and best friends are Trevor and his wife Betty.
(, Mon 15 Jun 2009, 15:36, archived)
# Ahh, yes but you omitted to mention
Victor Aller, American pianist, born March 26, 1905 in New York City, died May 1977 in the area of Los Angeles, California. He had a successful career behind the scenes in the film industry, and he taught piano in Hollywood, where his students sometimes included actors preparing to depict musicians on screen. His present fame, however, rests primarily on his performances in acclaimed 1950s-vintage Capitol Records recordings with the Hollywood String Quartet, including accounts of piano quintets by Brahms, Franck, and Shostakovich and the Brahms piano quartets.
Aller had family and professional ties to the quartet. His sister, Eleanor Aller, was its cellist, and her husband, Felix Slatkin, was its first violinist. They and the other quartet members were all musicians with the Hollywood studios of the era, and Victor Aller was the orchestra manager at Warner Bros. during the 1940s; by 1949, his hourly earnings amounted to $19.95 according to company records.
Among Warner films in which Victor Aller had direct input were The Beast with Five Fingers and the biographical picture Song Without End. For the former, he made a piano arrangement for left hand of the Chaconne from J.S Bach's Violin Partita in D minor, and, according to a press release, he spent 200 hours training actor Victor Francen in proper technique. For the latter, he provided technical instruction to Dirk Bogarde, who played the leading role of Franz List.
Aller's musical heritage lives on with relatives in succeeding generations. His daughter is concert violinist Judith Aller, a student of Jascha Heifetz; his nephew, son of Felix Slatkin and Eleanor Aller, is noted American orchestra conductor Leonard Slatkin.
(, Mon 15 Jun 2009, 15:37, archived)
# but only if...
Earl "Fatha" Hines became the star of Chicago with his Grand Terrace Cafe band and began to broadcast live from The Grand Terrace nightly coast-to-coast across America. Meanwhile in Kansas City and across the Southwest, an earthier, bluesier style was developed by such bandleaders as Benny Moten and, later, by Jay McShann and Jesse Stone. Big band remotes on the major radio networks spread the music from ballrooms and clubs across the country during the 1930s and 1940s, with remote broadcasts from jazz clubs continuing into the 1950s on NBC's Monitor. Radio was a major factor in gaining notice and fame for Benny Goodman, the “Pied Piper of Swing”. Soon, others challenged him, and “the battles of the bands” became a staple at theater performances featuring many groups on one bill.
(, Mon 15 Jun 2009, 15:38, archived)
# You say that, but
Sulzberger Bay (77°0′S 152°0′WCoordinates: 77°0′S 152°0′W) is a bay between Fisher Island and Vollmer Island, along the coast of Marie Byrd Land. Discovered by the Byrd Antarctic Expedition on December 5, 1929, and named by Byrd for Arthur H. Sulzberger, publisher of the New York Times, a supporter of the Byrd expeditions in 1928-30 and 1933-35.
The Sulzberger Bay indents the front of the Sulzberger Ice Shelf (77°0′S 148°0′W), an ice shelf about 85 miles (137 km) long and 50 miles (80 km) wide bordering the coast of Marie Byrd Land between Edward VII Peninsula and Guest Peninsula. The ice shelf was observed and roughly mapped by the Byrd Antarctic Expedition (1928-30). Sulzberger Basin (77°0′S 152°30′W) is an undersea basin on the central Ross shelf named in association with the Sulzberger Bay.
(, Mon 15 Jun 2009, 15:41, archived)
# I can only conclude with
Cosmic strings, if they exist, would be extremely thin with diameters on the same order as a proton. They would have immense density, however, and so would represent significant gravitational sources. A cosmic string 1.6 kilometers in length may be heavier than the Earth. However general relativity predicts that the gravitational potential of a straight string vanishes: there is no gravitational force on static surrounding matter. The only gravitational effect of a straight cosmic string is a relative deflection of matter (or light) passing the string on opposite sides (a purely topological effect). A closed loop of cosmic string gravitates in a more conventional way. During the expansion of the universe, cosmic strings would form a network of loops, and their gravity could have been responsible for the original clumping of matter into galactic superclusters.
(, Mon 15 Jun 2009, 15:42, archived)
# You win.
Cosmic Strings trump everything.

Apart from Crème brûlée, that is.

Crème brûlée (crème brulée in L'Orthographie 1990)[1] (French for "burnt cream"; pronounced /krm brule/ in English, IPA: [km byle] in French), burnt cream, crema catalana, or Trinity cream is a dessert consisting of a rich custard base topped with a layer of hard caramel, created by caramelizing sugar under a broiler, with a butane torch or other intense heat source, or by pouring sugar on top of the custard. It is usually served cold in individual ramekins.
The custard base is normally flavoured with just vanilla, but it can be enhanced with chocolate, a liqueur, fruit, etc. Sometimes the hardened sugar on top will be caramelized, by igniting a thin layer of liqueur sprinkled over the top.
(, Mon 15 Jun 2009, 15:45, archived)
# He was good, but I wanted to deck him.
(, Mon 15 Jun 2009, 15:36, archived)
# David Morse was better in
The Long Kiss Goodnight.

(, Mon 15 Jun 2009, 15:38, archived)
# NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NOON ON ON ON ONO
edit: hooray to teh mods!

who are you today's mystery mod?
(, Mon 15 Jun 2009, 15:34, archived)
# It's me*!
All give me presents and stuff. Now :)


* it's not really me
(, Mon 15 Jun 2009, 15:38, archived)
#
(, Mon 15 Jun 2009, 15:39, archived)
# Hahahaha
*runs off with present*

EDIT: Oh. A severed hand :(
(, Mon 15 Jun 2009, 15:40, archived)
# Was that where I left it D:
That means I've given my ex a box of choccies.
NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!
(, Mon 15 Jun 2009, 15:47, archived)
# YOU?
bet it's not.

right then - prove it - mod this extremely nsfw image...


(, Mon 15 Jun 2009, 15:40, archived)
# OK!
*whistles*
(, Mon 15 Jun 2009, 15:41, archived)
# MOD IT!
(, Mon 15 Jun 2009, 15:43, archived)
# It's borked my powers
(, Mon 15 Jun 2009, 15:44, archived)
# it's not me because i was never a mod
(, Mon 15 Jun 2009, 15:42, archived)
# porno bust!...(dayshift is now the gayshift)...

(and gayshift will now be known as 'Supercoolfuntime').
(, Mon 15 Jun 2009, 15:39, archived)
# That sounds pretty gay dude
(, Mon 15 Jun 2009, 15:45, archived)
# actually...
...it's quite the opposite.
(, Mon 15 Jun 2009, 15:48, archived)
# shame the same fucking idiots post on dayshift
(, Mon 15 Jun 2009, 17:37, archived)
# I can remove the logos if thats a problem for you guys?
Nick griffin=bukaki? no?
(, Mon 15 Jun 2009, 16:29, archived)