Glens Falls (NY) Online Book Discussion Group discussion
What are U doing today?
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What are U doing today? (Ongoing thread)

Nina, next Sunday, Feb. 28, is the date of the Academy Awards show. I'll be watching THAT! :)

That does sound like a better plan, Nina! :-)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yQLIh...
He doesn't show up until about halfway through, but it's only a 2 minute clip. What a guy!

Nina, please remind me again on that date. :)
Jim, another video follows that one. A comment below it says: "At 90 years old, Dick Van Dyke isn’t slowing down anytime soon. In 2012, at the age of 86, he became a newlywed when he married his wife Arlene—who happens to be 46 years his junior."
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OTSGf...
In the video you can see how old he is from the wrinkles around his neck and his face, which looks a bit old too, but still much younger than 90. He must have had work done on it. But he's still dancing and moves like a young person!

https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?s...

https://www.facebook.com/jim.maclachl... "
I like it!


Can anyone tell me why (view spoiler)


SPOILER'S AHEAD:
Thanks, Nina, for the excellent explanation. I had seen Carson having trouble pouring wine but I didn't know why. Now I understand how the plot developed from there.
Yes, I did see the wedding. No bridesmaids. lol
I'm not sure about what Tom and Mary's husbands are up to. Is it the auto business? Yes, I think that's it. It's a good solution for everyone involved.
New Year's Eve was a good way to end the series with everyone kissing and happily celebrating.


Nina, I think I missed that part, but I think I saw all the rest.
PS-Yes, now that you mention it, Tom did look heavier.

I loved the Dowager's reaction to Denker ratting out Spratt. She sure put them both in their proper places. Maggie Smith did a great job.
I knew you'd both love the finale. It really did wrap things up pretty close to perfectly. The Washington Post has a good summary of it if you need to refresh yourselves on names. (I did.)
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/a...

Jim, I know I missed the first half of the show. I tuned in late.
Thanks for the link. It'll come in handy.


Nina, you can reveal it to me. LOL
Not sure I could sit through all that again if it were a movie. Sometimes it dragged. Besides who could replace an actor like the fellow who played Carson? The actor was Jim Carter: http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0141697/?r...


Nina, I always think of Jane Wyman when I think of Nancy and Ronald Reagan. I often wonder what Jane Wyman thought about her ex-husband becoming president. At times it must have seemed surreal.
Wiki gives the following dates for Ronald Reagan's marriages:
Jane Wyman (m. 1940–49)
Nancy Davis (m. 1952–2004) [Nancy was about 10 years younger than Ronald.]
So there were several years between the 2 marriages.
Wiki says that Ronald Reagan had 5 children: including Maureen, Michael, Patricia, and Ronald. [A daughter named Christine (born to Jane & Ronald) lived only one day.]
It says that Jane Wyman had the following children: Maureen Reagan, Christine Reagan, and Michael Reagan (adopted).
Wiki also says, about Jane Wyman and Ronald Reagan: "Together they had two biological children, Maureen (1941–2001) and Christine (who was born in 1947 but only lived one day), and adopted a third, Michael, (born 1945)." [Michael is the only one living now.]
Wiki says that Nancy had 2 children, Patti and Ron. She had only one spouse, Ronald Reagan (1952–2004). So Patricia and Ronald were Nancy and Ronald's children.
================================================
Wiki says:
"After arguments about Reagan's political ambitions, Wyman filed for divorce in 1948, citing a distraction due to her husband's Screen Actors Guild union duties; the divorce was finalized in 1949. He is the only US president to have been divorced."
"Reagan and Wyman continued to be friends until his death, with Wyman voting for Reagan in both of his runs and, upon his death, saying 'America has lost a great president and a great, kind, and gentle man.'"
"Reagan met actress Nancy Davis (1921–2016) in 1949 after she contacted him in his capacity as president of the Screen Actors Guild to help her with issues regarding her name appearing on a Communist blacklist in Hollywood. She had been mistaken for another Nancy Davis. She described their meeting by saying, "I don't know if it was exactly love at first sight, but it was pretty close."
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ABOVE INFO WAS FROM THE FOLLOWING WIKI PAGES:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ronald_...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nancy_R...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jane_Wyman


Yes, it was an extraordinary relationship. They each filled-in the other's personality. They say that she was strong where he was soft. He had warmth and she had steel. :)

It's time to spray the Star-of-Bethlehem weed that's slowly trying to take over my fields. I have 3 major outbreaks that I need to fence off with temporary electric fencing, including hooking up chargers to each, spray, overseed with new grass, & let settle for a month. The herbicide that I need to kill it off required me to get licensed to buy it & it's nasty stuff. I hate using it, but this invasive isn't leaving me any choice.
Last night, I was going to start on that, but it had gotten late, so I thought I'd just do some pruning & weeding along the property lines. I wound up talking to my neighbor to the south & he offered me a disc harrow/plow plus a bunch of 2x6 yellow pine. I have to take them off the 6x6's they're attached to, but it's great wood & expensive to buy, so I plan to strip at least one. I'll need to take the tractor down there to get the disc & to flip the pallets.
He's getting divorced & probably selling the house. It's in the kids' price range. Pretty close to perfect if they can stand to live so close to us. They could shove the kids through the fence & watch them walk across the south horse field all the way up to the horse barn or the house from their kitchen window. Erin could pet her horse over the fence when he's down that way. Seems perfect to me, but I'm not sure if Josh will agree. Living that close to his in-laws might not work for him. I can sympathize.

Jim, there's a lot to consider before making that choice. There are advantages and disadvantages. We once were going to build next-door to Ed's folks. We tried a trial-run by living with them for 6 months (while planning the building of the house). It's a good thing we did because all sorts of relationship problems reared their ugly heads. :) We built elsewhere.
No matter how well-intentioned the parents are, the problem of over-intrusiveness becomes evident sooner or later. Kids like to make their own decisions and live their own way without being observed and judged by their parents or their parents' relatives and friends. Familiarity (sometimes) breeds contempt. :)


Seems there's always a fly in the ointment. Of course, it all depends on the persons involved. Sometimes the pros outweigh the cons. Sometimes there's a solution midway between the two options. We moved elsewhere (less than an hour away) and the relationships smoothed out.


Nina, I think it was different for you. After all, it was your daughter and you were the mother. In my case, it was my mother-in-law and I was the daughter-in-law. :)
I wish it could have been my mother instead of my mother-in-law! I would have loved living near my mother! I don't think my husband would have minded either.


Yes, Nina. I think so. It makes a BIG difference!


Gee, to think, we take that for granted these days. What speed do you have?


Jim, do you see any signs of improvement in the future? More cell towers, for example?


Jim, our service seems to be like that... a monopoly on providing Internet and TV to our area. It doesn't seem right but we seem to be stuck with it.

https://apps.fcc.gov/edocs_public/att...

Jim, it's all beyond me!



"Dismal red dress" is a good way to put it! :)
I wonder what percentage of funeral services no longer take place in churches.
Nina, good luck with your new computer!


Nina, I understand what you're going through. It's so hard to make a change when you're comfortable with what you have. I dread learning anything new that's computer-related.
It seems that the learning-curve gets steeper all the time. My son, who is a software engineer, says that the newer formats are made more difficult because they use so many icons that you have to know the meaning of. The format isn't intuitive.
For example, I use the Thunderbird mail program. At the top-left of the columns there is a strange icon. If you hover over it, it says "display message threads".
Well, I didn't know that's what it did. I inadvertently clicked on the icon. Suddenly I couldn't find the email replies which I had just sent out. They were hidden in the threads.
I panicked and telephoned my son but he wasn't home. I searched through my "sent" emails but couldn't find the emails I had just sent. I tried searching with the search tool. It kept telling me that the emails were in my sent folder but I couldn't see them.
Finally I clicked on the troublesome icon and "unthreaded" my emails. Then I found the ones I was looking for.
But I was really flummoxed for a while there! It was a terrible feeling because I thought something was wrong with my computer. I have to learn to "hover" to see what the icons are for.

So I did a CTRL/minus and made the screen smaller. Then the scroll bar disappeared and the account button appeared. Little things like that are so annoying.



Jim, my son complains about the same type of thing. Thanks for mentioning the change in the top bar's Home button. As you say, "Why!" Maybe they're trying to make room on the page but it's not necessary. I feel sorry for folks who are just starting out. Everything is hidden.

Nina, I too have had my laptop for several years. I dread having to change and get used to new formats, and losing the established cookies that help with sign-ins. I guess we'll have to deal with it when it happens. Isn't your husband able to guide you in getting accustomed to the changes?
Books mentioned in this topic
Educated (other topics)Pride and Prejudice (other topics)
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War and Peace (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Tara Westover (other topics)Ann Howard Creel (other topics)
Ann Howard Creel (other topics)
C.W. Gortner (other topics)
C.W. Gortner (other topics)
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Thanks for the reminder, Nina. I would have forgotten if you hadn't mentioned it!