magni:
I don't know or understand the attraction, regarding L&L. As far as Morrissey goes its quite something to be a as vain as he is and appearantly fragile as well. Thats quite a fine line. But thats your basic diva isn't it?

For L&L I think its just the rational triumphing over the emotional sense which is really for the most part a bastard thing to do. Unless of course you are transplanting to a better emotion and leaving it at that. I think its the transformation factor that attracts me ultimately to that story.

But all of that is well beyond the basic "true crime" details that make it quite a par above the usual "true crime" story.
signalnoise:
i dig that you have a love/hate thing with your celebrities. becuase my own life is unfulfilling (wink) - i am always evaluating my celebrities, looking at their talent, opinions, appearance, trying to decide how i feel about them ("i respect the artist, but man they annoy me" - "his music sucks, but he seems like a good guy"). i have no idea why i do this. smile
esme:
Did you manage to go out into the world after Moz? I don't think anyone ended up making it to Neo. Please please keep me up to date on Delilah's, though.

I'm going to have to think about this love/hate celeb thing. I feel like I've had a similar experience, but can't remember with/toward whom.
nerdboy2345:
you dont know how long i had that stuck in my head.
signalnoise:
re: living in the city. i'm a huge fan of living in the city. i find it hard to imagine wanting to trade this for another kind of life. but i guess anything is possible. i actually have this friend who rails against urban life, talking about how it is no place to live a city. i'm not quite sure what he thinks urban life is like ... gun fights and sewer crocs maybe? cities i think are great for kids - they get to experience so much life. suburbs are actually terrible for kids - b/c the lack of sidewalks, public transport, and general suburban malaise keeps kids cooped up at home, not living life.