[CHORUS:]
Snuggly fluffy kitten zombies!
Snuggly fluffy kitten zombies!
Snuggly fluffy kitten zombies!
Filling up the hallway … Awesome still!
We’re running as we try to save the day!
But a zombie horde is here to block the way!
Now we gotta save the train,
But the undead folks just want my brain! [repeat CHORUS]
My scanner says there’s kittens up ahead!
Not fluffy, they’re just hungry and undead!
Though I know the danger’s great,
On a scale of ten, well, “you’re-an-eight”! [repeat CHORUS]
Either one seems possible. If GODOT can affect the way a mind perceives the lettering on a sign, couldn’t the same procedure change the way the mind perceives the international zombie symbol on a radar screen, by giving it cute little ears and a fluffy tail?
Interesting: so GODOT can really only change the text that is already there (or the shadows on the wall that look like text) rather than create them out of nowhere.
“… or the shadows on the wall that look like text” would probably extend to the brightness features on the lunar surface. There certainly wasn’t any pre-existing writing on several of the walls he’s used in St. Charlie, but there may well have been shadows. This requires an experiment: where’s a arbitrarily flat surface and a battery of floodlights when you need one?
Does Ruby need to let go and use the Force?
Why not? Sweetheart let go.
(TUNE: “Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles” theme song, Chuck Lorre)
[CHORUS:]
Snuggly fluffy kitten zombies!
Snuggly fluffy kitten zombies!
Snuggly fluffy kitten zombies!
Filling up the hallway … Awesome still!
We’re running as we try to save the day!
But a zombie horde is here to block the way!
Now we gotta save the train,
But the undead folks just want my brain!
[repeat CHORUS]
My scanner says there’s kittens up ahead!
Not fluffy, they’re just hungry and undead!
Though I know the danger’s great,
On a scale of ten, well, “you’re-an-eight”!
[repeat CHORUS]
Oh, Ed. What are we going to do with you?
Let’s give him to GODOT. As a team, they’d be unstoppable.
Filking in acronyms!
My mind is still reeling from the idea that Chuck Lorre wrote the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles theme song. Strange, but apparently true…
“What’s the scouter say?”
“It’s over 9000! … zombies!”
Here is a puzzler – can GODOT mess with GRAPHICAL displays?
I’m thinking radar repeater w/ an icon (image) representing a zombie.
Perhaps he changed the hey to say the blips represented snuggly, fluffy kittens instead of ravenous, slavering zombies.
Either one seems possible. If GODOT can affect the way a mind perceives the lettering on a sign, couldn’t the same procedure change the way the mind perceives the international zombie symbol on a radar screen, by giving it cute little ears and a fluffy tail?
Interesting: so GODOT can really only change the text that is already there (or the shadows on the wall that look like text) rather than create them out of nowhere.
We can work with this… somehow
He put a message on the Moon: people have reported seeing rabbits and men, but not writing as far as I am aware.
“… or the shadows on the wall that look like text” would probably extend to the brightness features on the lunar surface. There certainly wasn’t any pre-existing writing on several of the walls he’s used in St. Charlie, but there may well have been shadows. This requires an experiment: where’s a arbitrarily flat surface and a battery of floodlights when you need one?
Ooooh! Can we have shippy panels of UNITY giving Sweetheart a bath?
Wait for me! I’ve got a pitcher of Pina Coladas!!!
mnem
Hey, I have 2 small children. I’m dying for an adult conversation.