Bill is totally dead. The Doctor used her as a human shield as part of their plan (her idea, actually), and it wound up backfiring. See, Nardole has actually been working with Missy to double-cross the Doctor and leave him stranded, and it all comes together in the latest episode. Bill was shot, died in the Doctor’s arms, and Missy made extra-sure she won’t be coming back. On top of all that, the TARDIS has been stolen, leaving the Doctor stranded on a frozen planet, severely wounded.
MatthewTheLucky
Also, Nardole is betrayed by Missy, but Clara and Lady Me save him at the last second.
people with my type of tongue often dislike booze so i cant argue with you there.
Dean
Are you secretly a Reptoid? It’s OK if you are, we won’t tell.
miados
no i have something that makes me a “super taster” which mostly means i have way more taste buds than most people. most people with it hate the taste of booze, coffee, and brussel sprouts. well those are the three most likely to be disliked by people with this mild anomoly
Yumi
I know someone who makes a lot of money off being a super taster. I forget what it is that he professionally tastes, though.
miados
i remember learning i had this oddity. the whole science class was given a paper and everyone popped it in their mouth. i gagged so badly it was foul but nobody else tasted whatever chemicals or whatever it was that was on it. even when the guy across the table took mine and tried.
Most interesting bit: Chimpanzees and Humans completely separately evolved the trait of being unable to taste it.
miados
yeah that chemical. While the super taster is interesting to a degree to some people it is not something i care enough about to remember the name of the chemical being tasted.
Vinny
Bummer – because I love booze, coffee, and brussel sprouts.
Needfuldoer
It’s a weird thing to describe to other people, isn’t it! To me, brussels sprouts, cabbage, and spinach are all unpalatable by themselves, and celery just tastes like pepper straight from the shaker.
Salt your coffee. Seriously, that smooths it right out. I can’t drink coffee black without it.
Once again, demonstrating the power the concept of ‘FREE PIZZA’ has on the college student mind.
(Yes, yes, I know, it’s being paid for by their college meal programs, but in the end SOMEONE always pays for the pizza, right? It’s an effectively unlimited supply of pizza that the student pays nothing out-of-pocket for, the effect is the same.)
I mean, it depends on what type of grade-school cafeteria pizza you had… at my school, every Wednesday was pizza day, but it cycled through different types of pizza, and I remember two types being gross– Mexican pizza and some type that had a bunch of weird vegetables on it. Oh, and I think one year we had Chuck-E-Cheese personal pizzas that came in their own boxes and had cheese like plastic.
Ten year old me would’ve straight up shot someone for the grade-school cafeteria pizza on a stuffed crust pizza day, though.
Oh god, I’d mentally blocked out school cafeteria mexican pizza, whyyyyyy
Yumi
Elementary school Mexican pizza is one of the cruelest things ever done to children. “Yay, it’s pizza day! Oh, Mexican pizza? What’s that? Well, it’s pizza, so why no– oh crap, what is this????”
And then you couldn’t get anything else, even if you hated it.
miados
i would get half my friends square pizza for half my peanut butter and syrup sandwich. i would eat them with the pizza on top of the sandwich. of course this was in elementary school.
JetstreamGW
… peanut butter and syrup?
That sounds kinda icky. And messy.
miados
and tasty. although syrup and honey are interchangable for it.
StClair
I loved PB&H sandwiches as a kid.
Devilish
Even better. Peanut Butter and Marshmallow. They make a marshmallow spread and it tastes great with peanut butter on a sandwhich
Tawdry Quirks
The ultimate variation on this theme is panini with Nutella and honey. It’s a very sticky sandwich, but so worth the mess.
I hated sweet stuff (like jelly) as a kid so I used to eat peanut butter and butter sandwiches. Now that I’m a parent myself, I’m kind of shocked my mom agreed to make that for me for so long.
Needfuldoer
You had different kinds? My elementary school just bought a stack of extremely thin plain cheese XXL party pizzas from the local greasy pizza joint. We’re talking sub-Little-Ceasars here. Sure, each piece was pretty big but it tasted like bread with Hunts sauce on it. What you wanted there was Breakfast for Lunch (french toast, sausage links, hash browns, and maple syrup) or the Not-McRib they made with formed meat patties and hamburger buns.
Were your rectangle pizzas anything like Elio’s frozen pizzas?
I literally ate that stuff five times a week for several years. My grade school had it as a option every day, and while some of the other things may have been better, at least you knew what you were getting with the pizza.
Granted, what you were getting was linoleum covered in rubber cement, dotted with pencil erasers trying to pass as pepperoni, but still, consistent.
I feel like there’s probably a misunderstanding going on? Or just vastly different experiences I suppose, but even then. What did kids go at lunch time in your grade school?
Pat
Church basement for several years, although they did serve food.
After remodeling the buildings we got an actual cafeteria, though oddly they cut the hot lunch program at the same time. They ordered food out on different days, though. On Tuesdays you could get Hungry Howie’s pizza. They expanded that to a limited selection with no customization from Wendy’s on… Wednesday? You got a slip and had to turn it in on Monday with your orders for restaurant days for the week.
I believe they still do the restaurant thing at that school, but now there’s something every day.
Cholma
I lived 4 blocks from Elementary school & 2 blocks from Jr. High. Walked home for lunch! 😀
Lived 15 minutes or so from High School, so usually ate some junk food in the cafeteria or rode home in a friends car. We lived in the sweet spot of the town. ‘Course, 2 of the 3 Jr Highs are closed now. Mine was torn down for a Retirement Home, and the remaining Jr High is now on the far side of the town I grew up in. The years have not been good for it, population wise.
foamy
Home, outdoors, or gym, depending.
Cholma
Oh yeah, forgot about that. Our gym doubled as a lunch room. Had metal tables with benches that folded out the walls somehow. (forget exactly how they did it) You had to bring a bag lunch though, the kitchen was smaller than in most homes. I mostly remember it was used to make Hot Chocolate in the Winter for those of us on the Safety Patrol. (Crossing Guards at the nearby street intersections in the neighborhood)
Tripled, here. There was a stage built off one end with storage underneath for the chairs. At assemblies.and performances we’d look at the steel beams overhead and wonder when errant kickballs or balloons would come back to Earth.
It seemed huge, but I haven’t been there since 4th grade; it may have gotten smaller.
Needfuldoer
Did we go to the same school? Our “multi-purpose room”‘s stage hadn’t been used as one since the Johnson administration; it was just fancy storage. The staircases and landings for catwalk access were converted into (pathetic) offices for PE and the guidance councelor.
Every so often, one of the big kids in gym class would hit the pipes up by the ceiling with something, and make a little asbestos flurry. (This was 25 years ago, mind you.) Good times.
Not giving my age, but I was at this school during the *Johnson administration. Catholic K-8, so assemblies, Christmas and holiday pageants, and masses kept the stage occupied, plus the occaisional talent show.
(*Lyndon Johnson, if anyone is asking.)
Yumi
My elementary school cafeteria used to be a gym. There was still a basketball hoop screwed into the wall, but we had had an entire separate gym for years, so I was never sure why they left it there. It was basically just asking for kids to throw food at it and then get in trouble.
I know different schools will have different lunch experiences, but I find it surprising that it would be surprising for an elementary school to have a cafeteria. Also, I’m curious how long ago you were in school? Just because by the time I was in school, the days of being able to go home for lunch in my school district were long gone.
Some schools don’t! My elementary school was built on an old orange grove site and instead of a cafeteria we just had an outdoor eating area (which we literally called the orange grove as it was what was left of the old grove) with benches and orange trees. There were tables set up where the hot lunch would be doled out (usually just brought my own lunch though).
I’ve actually NEVER had a cafeteria in school. Junior high (same school) didn’t even have a dedicated eating area. There were two spots with benches/tables and kids would also eat on the cement assembly steps. High school there was a covered area with tables and a few other outdoor spots. We had a food truck (not one of the awesome trendy food trucks of today, but pre-food-truck-trend greasy burger/taco/fries truck) that’d stop by at lunch time.
And my college was so tiny (small art school) that we had no on-campus food other than vending machines. Most people would just drive somewhere local for lunch (nowhere within walking distance to eat sadly).
I assume indoor cafeterias are more common in places with cold winters and I guess in hot/temperate areas with little rain/snow like Southern California outdoor eating areas are more common?
thejeff
I assume that college wasn’t residential? No dorms/living on campus. You can’t really do that without having food available. We weren’t even allowed to have cars on campus as freshmen. We all would have starved – or died from scurvy just eating from vending machines.
my elementary school everyone had to pack a lunch, but in middle school there was a cafeteria. they never had quite enough for the whole school, though, so you had to be quick to get your one slice of pizza or you’d be stuck with some other crap nobody wanted (I can’t remember what that was, so maybe it was bad enough I preferred to go hungry?)
in college, though, the pizza was more weapon than food. seriously, I could not chew through half the crust.
Pat
The cafeteria food at my college was not good. They remodeled it while I was there and expanded it, including adding a pizza station that was there every day.
I was so jealous of all the on-campus food options at big state schools/universities. Tiny art school on a canyon road = nothing but vending machines and no food within walking distance except a cheese shop.
Pat
I did not have that. Somewhere between the extremes, I s’pose.
foamy
Once I hit Jr High (grades 7-9) we had a cafeteria, but it was pay-for-your-food and I mostly hit it up for the doughnuts.
College outsourced a lot of the food services. Various chains and some one-off businesses. I made extensive use of the cafe in the engineering lounge.
My elementary school (grades 4-7), we just ate our lunches at our desks, same as in primary school.
Every so often we’d be able to buy chicken noodle soup in a styrofoam cup, which of course would drip onto the desk. We’d grab some paper towel or what and wipe it up, of course, but still, all the desks always smelled of it.
Made things a bit weird when we put our heads down on our desks (the usual thing to do if we finished our work early, which is weird, looking back on it now).
Junior high had an area we could hang out in near the lockers to eat, not having one desk per kid for the whole day; but they didn’t have enough tables for everyone (either that or cliques/cool kids would take them over so they were never filled to capacity), so mostly I ate my lunch sitting on the floor and leaning against the wall.
Having an actual dedicated lunch room in senior high was really weird. They did sell some food, but only hot dogs (fifty cents each), and I’m not even sure that was every day. Didn’t matter, though, because each time Norm would get there first and buy like ten of them, so only a few other kids would be able to get any.
Why on earth they didn’t just make more of them I have no idea.
But the school cafeterias you see on TV and in Archie comics and what? Where you have a tray and get a bunch of hot food on a plate? Totally alien to me. For me, you packed a lunch, or you starved. Didn’t see an actual cafeteria until college (where they’d jacked the prices so high few of us could afford to eat anyways–seriously, $7 for a cheeseburger, and this was in the early Nineties!).
Blah blah, uphill in the snow, both ways, get off my lawn.
292 thoughts on “Indulging”
Doctor_Who
Joe decides that facing the music is better than facing the whatever-the-hell-Danny’s-doing-to-that-ukulele.
Emperor Norton II
Again, Danny can already play some sweet chords.
That’s right, I’m going to haunt you and ruin your jokes FOREVER!
Or until I get bored.
Nahh, it’ll be forever.
Doctor_Who
Your just jealous because I’m president of Earth, and you’re only Emperor of the United States.
Emperor Norton II
Emperor of the Internet, thank you very much.
And you’re no president, you’re just a doctor.
Alexander Hammil
So are you related to the Emperor or Empress Norton?
thejeff
Cool. I hadn’t heard of the Widow Norton before.
Rowen Morland
If this is Emperor Norton of internet fame then I guess they are running a successful anti-virus empire.
Pablo360
You don’t get to brag about that, you don’t even want to be President of Earth
Doctor_Who
Didn’t want to be president of Gallifrey either, didn’t stop me.
Pablo360
Also it’s your fault Bill died
StClair
(oh, that was low. hit a man while/where he’s hurting, whydoncha?)
Pablo360
I like to think of myself as an asshole
Doctor_Who
Found Mike’s handle.
Clif
Yep.
SgtWadeyWilson
Actually, that’s really the fault of my favorite Timelord.
Twice.
Credit where it’s due, show some respect for the (currently, very probably, maybe…) deceased.
Shadowydreamer
Uh.. I hope to heavens you didn’t just spoiler me.. 🙁
coru
I’m guessing so, but I haven’t watched either so if that’s the case I’m kinda pissed.
Pablo360
Technically I’m totally lying.
Delicious Taffy
Bill is totally dead. The Doctor used her as a human shield as part of their plan (her idea, actually), and it wound up backfiring. See, Nardole has actually been working with Missy to double-cross the Doctor and leave him stranded, and it all comes together in the latest episode. Bill was shot, died in the Doctor’s arms, and Missy made extra-sure she won’t be coming back. On top of all that, the TARDIS has been stolen, leaving the Doctor stranded on a frozen planet, severely wounded.
MatthewTheLucky
Also, Nardole is betrayed by Missy, but Clara and Lady Me save him at the last second.
Icarus
Like Bwtf#.
http://www.dumbingofage.com/2017/comic/book-7/04-the-do-list/ukulele/
Stephen Bierce
*imagines Danny playing the theme to The Godfather*
Opus the Poet
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eMdxWRexbbQ
Not bad if played by a decent musician.
Ana Chronistic
“gotta jet, I’ve passed my feels quota for the year”
Plasma Mongoose
You gotta save those feels for important things, like cat videos.
AGV
Then he’ll comment on those videos that he “willl have to wrestle a t-werckz to recover his masculinity”
miados
pizza helps a lot of situations
inqntrol
Better than drowning your sorrows in booze.
miados
people with my type of tongue often dislike booze so i cant argue with you there.
Dean
Are you secretly a Reptoid? It’s OK if you are, we won’t tell.
miados
no i have something that makes me a “super taster” which mostly means i have way more taste buds than most people. most people with it hate the taste of booze, coffee, and brussel sprouts. well those are the three most likely to be disliked by people with this mild anomoly
Yumi
I know someone who makes a lot of money off being a super taster. I forget what it is that he professionally tastes, though.
miados
i remember learning i had this oddity. the whole science class was given a paper and everyone popped it in their mouth. i gagged so badly it was foul but nobody else tasted whatever chemicals or whatever it was that was on it. even when the guy across the table took mine and tried.
Random832
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phenylthiocarbamide
Most interesting bit: Chimpanzees and Humans completely separately evolved the trait of being unable to taste it.
miados
yeah that chemical. While the super taster is interesting to a degree to some people it is not something i care enough about to remember the name of the chemical being tasted.
Vinny
Bummer – because I love booze, coffee, and brussel sprouts.
Needfuldoer
It’s a weird thing to describe to other people, isn’t it! To me, brussels sprouts, cabbage, and spinach are all unpalatable by themselves, and celery just tastes like pepper straight from the shaker.
Salt your coffee. Seriously, that smooths it right out. I can’t drink coffee black without it.
Deanatay
Once again, demonstrating the power the concept of ‘FREE PIZZA’ has on the college student mind.
(Yes, yes, I know, it’s being paid for by their college meal programs, but in the end SOMEONE always pays for the pizza, right? It’s an effectively unlimited supply of pizza that the student pays nothing out-of-pocket for, the effect is the same.)
Durandal_1707
It’s no grade-school cafeteria pizza…
… and thank God for that.
David M Willis
BANNED
Yumi
I mean, it depends on what type of grade-school cafeteria pizza you had… at my school, every Wednesday was pizza day, but it cycled through different types of pizza, and I remember two types being gross– Mexican pizza and some type that had a bunch of weird vegetables on it. Oh, and I think one year we had Chuck-E-Cheese personal pizzas that came in their own boxes and had cheese like plastic.
Ten year old me would’ve straight up shot someone for the grade-school cafeteria pizza on a stuffed crust pizza day, though.
Shiro
Oh god, I’d mentally blocked out school cafeteria mexican pizza, whyyyyyy
Yumi
Elementary school Mexican pizza is one of the cruelest things ever done to children. “Yay, it’s pizza day! Oh, Mexican pizza? What’s that? Well, it’s pizza, so why no– oh crap, what is this????”
And then you couldn’t get anything else, even if you hated it.
miados
i would get half my friends square pizza for half my peanut butter and syrup sandwich. i would eat them with the pizza on top of the sandwich. of course this was in elementary school.
JetstreamGW
… peanut butter and syrup?
That sounds kinda icky. And messy.
miados
and tasty. although syrup and honey are interchangable for it.
StClair
I loved PB&H sandwiches as a kid.
Devilish
Even better. Peanut Butter and Marshmallow. They make a marshmallow spread and it tastes great with peanut butter on a sandwhich
Tawdry Quirks
The ultimate variation on this theme is panini with Nutella and honey. It’s a very sticky sandwich, but so worth the mess.
autogatos
I hated sweet stuff (like jelly) as a kid so I used to eat peanut butter and butter sandwiches. Now that I’m a parent myself, I’m kind of shocked my mom agreed to make that for me for so long.
Needfuldoer
You had different kinds? My elementary school just bought a stack of extremely thin plain cheese XXL party pizzas from the local greasy pizza joint. We’re talking sub-Little-Ceasars here. Sure, each piece was pretty big but it tasted like bread with Hunts sauce on it. What you wanted there was Breakfast for Lunch (french toast, sausage links, hash browns, and maple syrup) or the Not-McRib they made with formed meat patties and hamburger buns.
Were your rectangle pizzas anything like Elio’s frozen pizzas?
OOzulu
At my elementary school the pizza was lightly roastws glue and cardboard. Now in high school, that pizza was the bomb.
Doctor_Who
I literally ate that stuff five times a week for several years. My grade school had it as a option every day, and while some of the other things may have been better, at least you knew what you were getting with the pizza.
Granted, what you were getting was linoleum covered in rubber cement, dotted with pencil erasers trying to pass as pepperoni, but still, consistent.
Epochflame
Same stuff was served at mine, but I took my chances with the other stuff, which was usually much better, if not flavorful
Tacos
We’d pick off the pepperoni and just eat that and either give the rest of the pizza to somebody else or just throw it away.
foamy
Your grade schools had cafeterias????
Yumi
I feel like there’s probably a misunderstanding going on? Or just vastly different experiences I suppose, but even then. What did kids go at lunch time in your grade school?
Pat
Church basement for several years, although they did serve food.
After remodeling the buildings we got an actual cafeteria, though oddly they cut the hot lunch program at the same time. They ordered food out on different days, though. On Tuesdays you could get Hungry Howie’s pizza. They expanded that to a limited selection with no customization from Wendy’s on… Wednesday? You got a slip and had to turn it in on Monday with your orders for restaurant days for the week.
I believe they still do the restaurant thing at that school, but now there’s something every day.
Cholma
I lived 4 blocks from Elementary school & 2 blocks from Jr. High. Walked home for lunch! 😀
Lived 15 minutes or so from High School, so usually ate some junk food in the cafeteria or rode home in a friends car. We lived in the sweet spot of the town. ‘Course, 2 of the 3 Jr Highs are closed now. Mine was torn down for a Retirement Home, and the remaining Jr High is now on the far side of the town I grew up in. The years have not been good for it, population wise.
foamy
Home, outdoors, or gym, depending.
Cholma
Oh yeah, forgot about that. Our gym doubled as a lunch room. Had metal tables with benches that folded out the walls somehow. (forget exactly how they did it) You had to bring a bag lunch though, the kitchen was smaller than in most homes. I mostly remember it was used to make Hot Chocolate in the Winter for those of us on the Safety Patrol. (Crossing Guards at the nearby street intersections in the neighborhood)
ValdVin
Tripled, here. There was a stage built off one end with storage underneath for the chairs. At assemblies.and performances we’d look at the steel beams overhead and wonder when errant kickballs or balloons would come back to Earth.
It seemed huge, but I haven’t been there since 4th grade; it may have gotten smaller.
Needfuldoer
Did we go to the same school? Our “multi-purpose room”‘s stage hadn’t been used as one since the Johnson administration; it was just fancy storage. The staircases and landings for catwalk access were converted into (pathetic) offices for PE and the guidance councelor.
Every so often, one of the big kids in gym class would hit the pipes up by the ceiling with something, and make a little asbestos flurry. (This was 25 years ago, mind you.) Good times.
ValdVin
Not giving my age, but I was at this school during the *Johnson administration. Catholic K-8, so assemblies, Christmas and holiday pageants, and masses kept the stage occupied, plus the occaisional talent show.
(*Lyndon Johnson, if anyone is asking.)
Yumi
My elementary school cafeteria used to be a gym. There was still a basketball hoop screwed into the wall, but we had had an entire separate gym for years, so I was never sure why they left it there. It was basically just asking for kids to throw food at it and then get in trouble.
I know different schools will have different lunch experiences, but I find it surprising that it would be surprising for an elementary school to have a cafeteria. Also, I’m curious how long ago you were in school? Just because by the time I was in school, the days of being able to go home for lunch in my school district were long gone.
autogatos
Some schools don’t! My elementary school was built on an old orange grove site and instead of a cafeteria we just had an outdoor eating area (which we literally called the orange grove as it was what was left of the old grove) with benches and orange trees. There were tables set up where the hot lunch would be doled out (usually just brought my own lunch though).
I’ve actually NEVER had a cafeteria in school. Junior high (same school) didn’t even have a dedicated eating area. There were two spots with benches/tables and kids would also eat on the cement assembly steps. High school there was a covered area with tables and a few other outdoor spots. We had a food truck (not one of the awesome trendy food trucks of today, but pre-food-truck-trend greasy burger/taco/fries truck) that’d stop by at lunch time.
And my college was so tiny (small art school) that we had no on-campus food other than vending machines. Most people would just drive somewhere local for lunch (nowhere within walking distance to eat sadly).
I assume indoor cafeterias are more common in places with cold winters and I guess in hot/temperate areas with little rain/snow like Southern California outdoor eating areas are more common?
thejeff
I assume that college wasn’t residential? No dorms/living on campus. You can’t really do that without having food available. We weren’t even allowed to have cars on campus as freshmen. We all would have starved – or died from scurvy just eating from vending machines.
autogatos
Yeah, no dorms. There were a few local apartment complexes that the students typically rented.
Halpful
my elementary school everyone had to pack a lunch, but in middle school there was a cafeteria. they never had quite enough for the whole school, though, so you had to be quick to get your one slice of pizza or you’d be stuck with some other crap nobody wanted (I can’t remember what that was, so maybe it was bad enough I preferred to go hungry?)
in college, though, the pizza was more weapon than food. seriously, I could not chew through half the crust.
Pat
The cafeteria food at my college was not good. They remodeled it while I was there and expanded it, including adding a pizza station that was there every day.
I got pizza a lot because it was always edible.
autogatos
I was so jealous of all the on-campus food options at big state schools/universities. Tiny art school on a canyon road = nothing but vending machines and no food within walking distance except a cheese shop.
Pat
I did not have that. Somewhere between the extremes, I s’pose.
foamy
Once I hit Jr High (grades 7-9) we had a cafeteria, but it was pay-for-your-food and I mostly hit it up for the doughnuts.
College outsourced a lot of the food services. Various chains and some one-off businesses. I made extensive use of the cafe in the engineering lounge.
Kryss LaBryn
My elementary school (grades 4-7), we just ate our lunches at our desks, same as in primary school.
Every so often we’d be able to buy chicken noodle soup in a styrofoam cup, which of course would drip onto the desk. We’d grab some paper towel or what and wipe it up, of course, but still, all the desks always smelled of it.
Made things a bit weird when we put our heads down on our desks (the usual thing to do if we finished our work early, which is weird, looking back on it now).
Junior high had an area we could hang out in near the lockers to eat, not having one desk per kid for the whole day; but they didn’t have enough tables for everyone (either that or cliques/cool kids would take them over so they were never filled to capacity), so mostly I ate my lunch sitting on the floor and leaning against the wall.
Having an actual dedicated lunch room in senior high was really weird. They did sell some food, but only hot dogs (fifty cents each), and I’m not even sure that was every day. Didn’t matter, though, because each time Norm would get there first and buy like ten of them, so only a few other kids would be able to get any.
Why on earth they didn’t just make more of them I have no idea.
But the school cafeterias you see on TV and in Archie comics and what? Where you have a tray and get a bunch of hot food on a plate? Totally alien to me. For me, you packed a lunch, or you starved. Didn’t see an actual cafeteria until college (where they’d jacked the prices so high few of us could afford to eat anyways–seriously, $7 for a cheeseburger, and this was in the early Nineties!).
Blah blah, uphill in the snow, both ways, get off my lawn.
JetstreamGW