"Yo Gabba Gabba" looks like a show for the kids of club kids


Mom. why are we watching "Yo Gaba Gaba"? That show is stoopid.

OMFG! The meth and club kids of the 1990s are having kids now and this is what they've created to entertain their spawnage?

Even the black guy looks like he's walked out of a Dee-Lite video:


Am totally ferklempt with this one. I've missed an important pop-culture memo! This is worse than the Teletubbies!

You can tell I don't have little kids at home anymore. I just stumbled on "Yo Gabba Gabba" because my little is here after convincing me he didn't feel well today.

Oh snap! Their website looks like a netart site circa 1996!

Thing 2's been hanging out here next to me on the sofa. He spent the whole morning snoozing and reading Calvin and Hobbes. I just relented to his request to watch some TV as he asked to watch Akeelah and The Bee. But while getting the video player set that show popped up.

WTF!

It's like an ecstasy trip for kids without the side effects.

It's like an acid trip. Circa 1990. At "The World" (and if you don't know what am referring to, then you didn't club in NYC back in the day).

Wow.

They even had The Ting Tings on today.


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Lying on my cot, I came to the point that many people reach in a situation where they stop what they’re doing and say, "Wait a second. This is bullshit. This isn’t right." Two guys in our battalion were dead, two families ruined. And try as I might, I couldn’t figure out what the purpose of that was.

Things that had been welling up inside me all summer suddenly exploded in my head like a dozen Roman candles. I hated the president for his ignorance. I hated Donald Rumsfeld for his appalling arrogance and his lack of judgment. I hated their agenda. I hated Colin Powell for abandoning the Army—for not taking care of his soldiers—when he could have done something to stop these people. I hated them because the Army had seen this insurgency coming. I hated them because they didn’t listen to the people who told them this was a bad plan. I hated them because now, it meant that my guys could be next. It meant that I could be next. And I didn’t want to die like this—not in a confusing mishmash of ideologies, purposes, and bullets.

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