remindmeofthe: (fried gold - credit londonpie (??))
Cathryn (formerly catslash) ([personal profile] remindmeofthe) wrote2008-06-20 06:54 pm

(no subject)

So I've been working slowly through my library's collection of Jeeves and Wooster, which is more complicated than it needs to be as the majority of it is located at a different branch. Why wouldn't they keep them at the main building? I don't know. To ensure that I lose my patience and spend money I don't have yet on the box set, I guess.

Anyway, one of the DVDs had arrived at the main building, so I went to pick it up. The librarian grabbed it from the rack and positively swooned her way back over, all, "Hugh Laurie!" Hand to her chest and everything.

Me, brilliantly: "Yep." (Happily, I was mostly thinking about something else, so it didn't occur to me to laugh at her body language until I was out the door.)

She asked if I watch House and I said I did, then professed myself to be more of a Stephen Fry fan. That seemed to put an end to things.

This left me feeling much less dorky than my visit a couple of days ago, when I got two J&W tapes and four of Wodehouse's books, then didn't know what to say when the librarian that time around asked if I was a Wodehouse fan. How do I even explain the thought process behind checking out four books by an author who did absolutely nothing for me last time I tried his work? I said something inane about testing how much British farce I could take before my brain exploded, because it required less explanation than my packrat mentality about library books.

And it's a good thing I took four, because whatever problem it was that kept me from being interested in Wodehouse a few years ago (probably the lack of patience required to sort through the language; I wasn't nearly as good at reading older books with arcane vocabulary as I pretended to be) has ceased to exist. I spent an hour or so today in one of the eighty-seven gelatto places that have inexplicably appeared in Portland in the last couple of years, drinking a chocolate shake and reading Carry On, Jeeves, and I can't think of a more relaxing thing I could have done with my free afternoon. (More productive, yes. More relaxing, no.) I highly recommend this course of action if you are stressed, especially if you can find a gelatto place with squishy, cushy couches like Maple's has.

Along with Jeeves and Wooster, I've also been making my way through Videoport's almost-complete collection of A Bit of Fry and Laurie. I'd forgotten how much I love good sketch comedy, and that show is fucking excellent sketch comedy. I love the format - frequent bits of complete randomness stuck in between longer skits that, more often than not, just sort of trail off without laboring to contrive a punchline or explain themselves. Plus, lots of meta humor, with the concluding joke being that the skit is, in fact, a skit. (A bit of mediocre physical comedy in series one, for example, comes to a screeching halt when Hugh cries out, "You hit me too hard! No, I'm serious, forget the skit! That really hurt!" Stephen, to the camera: "He's such a baby.") I am, as I have mentioned before, a complete sucker for even the lamest of meta, so that invariably cracks me up. Plus, the majority of the humor is general, rather than being rooted in the pop culture of the time, which allows my American self (who was six when the show started airing) to follow it. There have only been a couple of times when an entire skit just went right over my head because I had no idea what the reference was. I think we all know that that's the mark of good comedy, so I won't belabor the point. I'm just really glad I FINALLY got around to trying it, because it is effing hilarious.

(By the way, in regards to the Torchwood/Jeeves and Wooster crossover that is now refusing to leave me alone: Jeeves would totally know all about Torchwood, Y/Y?)

[identity profile] ayrdaomei.livejournal.com 2008-06-21 12:26 am (UTC)(link)
Thanks for reminding me that I intended to read a few more of the J&W books, myself. A friend of mine in law school was a huge fan of the books and the series. She loaned me Thank You, Jeeves, but I never got around to the others.

[identity profile] remindmeofthe.livejournal.com 2008-06-21 12:52 am (UTC)(link)
No problem! I'm going to have to pillage the library again soon - the main building is closing for two weeks to restructure (something to do with budget cuts), so I will need plenty of J&W in my possession before that occurs.

[identity profile] apiphile.livejournal.com 2008-06-21 08:21 am (UTC)(link)
Y!

"You hit me too hard! No, I'm serious, forget the skit! That really hurt!"

There was a prog. called "Stephen Fry's Guilty Pleasures" and one of them was "punching Hugh Laurie".

[identity profile] remindmeofthe.livejournal.com 2008-06-21 02:03 pm (UTC)(link)
XD I have this scene all worked up in my head where Jack gets frustrated with his constant failed attempts to dodge Jeeves in search of the MacGuffin, so his choices are to either kill Jeeves or try to recruit him into the search. And a dead valet would just raise too many suspicions. (Besides, Jack's come to rather like Bertie and doesn't want to do that to him.) So Jack goes to Jeeves all, "Assigned by top secret organization founded by Queen Victoria blah blah," and Jeeves just says, "Indeed, sir. Has it ever occurred to Torchwood, sir, that secrecy is not always entirely ideal?" And Jack just stares.

TOO MANY FICS DEREK. HELP.

[identity profile] apiphile.livejournal.com 2008-06-22 08:00 pm (UTC)(link)
I hear ya, Cat. I hear ya. I'm going to drown in fuckin' ideas myself.

writeitwriteitwriteit

[identity profile] chocolate-frapp.livejournal.com 2008-06-22 06:02 pm (UTC)(link)
I love ABOFAL and Jeeves and Wooster. I bought all the ABOFAL DVDs with money I got for Christmas and consider it a terrific investment and my roomie and best friend bought me all the Jeeves DVDs for my birthday a couple of years ago. they're so much fun to watch! I liked the Jeeves books when I was a kid too which was way before I ever even knew who HL and SF were.