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#1
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So what are those li'l red icons beside the three columns? teeny little firecrackers?
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#2
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Yes.
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#3
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why?
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#4
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Quote:
cheers, b |
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#5
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explosions? am I missing something? what explosions?
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#6
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:cough: fireworks :cough: As in New Year's Celebration. As in "big party".
No, the world didn't come to an end. This time either. Who's on for next year? |
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#7
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jti, I think that firecrackers might have come to be associated with New Year's Eve because it is a chinese custom to set off firecrackers at New Year celebrations, and in the USA, especially on the west coast, the Chinese cultural influence is noticeable. I have heard that Chinese firecrackers were traditionally used to scare away evil spirits.
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#8
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learn something new every day - I've never associated fireworks or firecrackers with New Year's. But if you guys say so...
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#9
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I meant real explosions. Grenades. Bazookas. People running in terror. Oh, the humanity. That sort of thing. Doesn't that happen everywhere?
Okay. Just kidding. But there you go. I thought fireworks were everywhere. You're not the only one to learn something new, JTI. Cheers. |
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#10
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maybe it's because where I live, it's generally not comfortable being outside at midnight. This New Year's Eve wasn't too bad, around -20° Celsius, but we'd just come off a cold snap of -35° Celsius at nights for the ten days before Christmas.
I'd rather stay in and watch the ball drop on TV. |
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#11
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Hey jti, if you were watching the ball drop on TV, didn't they show the fireworks celebration with it? New York supposedly had a big display. Not that I would know, I wasn't watching.
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#12
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well, you see, my New Year's usually goes like this:
6:00 to 11:30 - go to friends' house with the Beloved; supper with friends; visit with friends. 11:31 to 11:54 - drink champers with the Beloved and friends. 11:55 - someone says, "We should turn on the TV and see the ball drop." 11:55 to 11:58 - turn on TV; frantically surf Canadian and American channels, looking for the Dick Clark and the ball. 11:59 - find channel with ball. 12:00 midnight - watch ball drop; say "Happy New Year;" kiss the Beloved. 12:01 - comment that there's nothing on now but a bunch of drunken New Yorkers in Times Square - they look cold. Turn off TV. 12:02 - 1:00 - Drink more champers; driven home by the Beloved. So even if there are fireworks after the ball drops, I'm not likely to see (or remember). |
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