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Pope disapproves of Harry Potter

BuckinMichigan said:
We went to a wedding of some friends a few years back and it was well into the 90s and no air in the church. That was no big deal. What concerned us was that the bride was Filipino and they did this thing where they put what was basically one big rope around the heads of the bride and groom. We were hoping neither one would collapse from the heat as it would have instantly become a giant noose. They both survived.
I went to a partial-Filipino wedding last September and they did the rope tradition as well. I though it was kind of cool as it reminded me that when you get married you are yoked to your partner. The only bad part of that wedding was when the groom took about five minutes to say his vows in the bride's native Tagalog. No one in the church except her direct family had any clue as to what the guy was saying, he struggled quite a bit through it as he doesn't speak the language and was reading the phonetic translation her father did of what he wanted to say, and he didn't bother to repeat the vows in English, so we had no idea what was actually said. Sure, it was a romantic jesture to her, which is all that really matters, but it left the rest of us in the dark.

My wedding was Messianic Jewish (primarily a Jewish wedding with Christian interpretations for everything). It lasted appox. 45 minutes, which was considered short....then again, our weekly services last between 2-3 hours every Saturday morning.
 
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buckeyegrad said:
I though it was kind of cool as it reminded me that when you get married you are yoked to your partner.
That's cool? :p

buckeyegrad said:
The only bad part of that wedding was when the groom took about five minutes to say his vows in the bride's native Tagalog..... it left the rest of us in the dark.
Try living with two former missionaries fluent in Micronesian... :roll2:
 
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tibor75 said:
Most Indian weddings come with a lunch (after wedding) and dinner (during reception). The one I went to September had a brunch and buffet dinner.
Totally off topic -- but why the hell are Popadoms so bloody expensive in the States?
(Go to an Indian restaurant in the UK and they throw in the Popadoms and Raita as a free appetizer, want more Popadoms, no problem).
Here the going gouging rate is $2-3 for four.
 
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scooter1369 said:
Picked up HBP last night at Media Play Sawmill. The place was a zoo..

You are a brave man. I'm sure my wife or I will be heading out this evening to pick up a copy. She is working today otherwise it would already be here. She loves those books. I have never read a page of any of them.
 
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sandgk said:
Just passed through the local Wally World in West Chester. Plenty of copies near the door @ $14.50 a piece. Place was practically empty though (which was strange).

I was just a Sam's Club and they had a crap load at the door... it seemed like every 3 or 4 people I passes had one in their cart. The guy checking out in front of us had three copies... I guess he was going to read it more than once :p... I didn't see any wizards though.
 
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Definitely not something that should shake your faith... if unchecked it could be a problem with really young kids, but probably not. No more than most fantasy stories from secular authors would. Just a matter of good parenting.

Can't wait to read it, but will have to wait until the girl reads it (too busy anyway with work).
 
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6.9 million copies in 24 hours. Thats amazing, one thing I found interesting is that my gf ordered her book from amazon about a month ago, it was delivered saturday afternoon. But Amazon refunded her 3 dollars because wal-mart and some places were selling it for less than they had it at first

New Potter Book Breaks Sales Records
July 18, 2005 8:54 AM EDT
NEW YORK - There's clearly something about Harry. The new Harry Potter book sold an astonishing 6.9 million copies in its first 24 hours - averaging better than 250,000 sales per hour and smashing the record held by the previous Potter release.

"This is a cause for celebration, not just for Scholastic, but for book lovers everywhere," said Lisa Holton, president of Scholastic Children's Books, author J.K. Rowling's U.S. publisher.

Sales for the sixth installment of Rowling's fantasy series easily outpaced those for Potter V, "Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix," which came out in 2003 and sold 5 million copies in the first 24 hours.

Acknowledging that some stores quickly ran out of books two years ago, Scholastic has already increased the print run for the latest "Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince" from 10.8 million copies to 13.5 million.

The Scholastic numbers are for the United States only. Sales figures from Britain are expected Monday.

Anticipated from the moment fans finished Potter V, the new book has been available virtually everywhere, from price clubs and supermarkets to the Scholastic Web site. Holton said Sunday that a big factor in the new sales record was a six-fold increase in the number of Potter bookstore parties, from 800 to 5,000, with both superstores and independent retailers dramatically increasing their participation.

Even allowing for deep discounts on the $29.99 release, "Half-Blood Prince" still easily generated more than $100 million in revenue. It's not only the richest opening in publishing history, but tops the combined estimated take for the weekend's top two movies, "Charlie and the Chocolate Factory" and "The Wedding Crashers."

"When a book beats out movies, we're in great shape," Holton said.

Paul Dergarabedian, president of box-office tracker Exhibitor Relations, said he did not believe that Potter pulled kids away from "Charlie and the Chocolate Factory," which starred Johnny Depp as the reclusive candy king Willy Wonka.

"With a $55 million opening, it's hard to say anything had a negative effect on the movie's performance," Dergarabedian said Sunday. "Charlie and the Chocolate Factory" was the biggest debut ever for Depp, topping the $46.6 million opening weekend of his 2003 hit "Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl."

Meanwhile, Barnes & Noble Inc. estimated 1.3 million U.S. sales for the latest Potter book in its first 48 hours, around 400,000 higher than for the first 48 hours of Potter V. Rival superstore chain Borders Group Inc. reported a record 850,000 Potter sales worldwide in the first day, 100,000 greater than for the debut of "Order of the Phoenix."

Although the book only went on sale midnight Saturday, some have already decided to pass their copies on to others. Used editions were available through eBay, Amazon.com and Alibris.com.

Unlike most blockbusters, "Harry and the Half-Blood Prince" is also a hit with critics, getting raves from The New York Times, the Seattle Times, The Associated Press and others. Many found it Rowling's deepest, most accomplished work, with a tragic conclusion that left even reviewers in tears.

A dissenting opinion came from the San Francisco Chronicle, where David Kipen observed of the 600-plus page novel: "A major character dies by the end of the latest Harry Potter book; readers who bore easily may feel a bit done in themselves.

"It's not that `Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince' is dull, exactly. ... No, the main problem is that J.K. Rowling has now written six of these bricks. Even if they were getting better, they're certainly not getting any fresher."

Shares of Scholastic rose 28 cents, or 0.8 percent, to $37.34 in morning trading on the Nasdaq Stock Market.
 
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I haven't read any of the books because I'm an adult, but I think the Pope has bigger issues with which to deal and should probably worry more about why his priests are fucking kids and why kids and their parents are dying around the world thanks to the anti-condom stance than what kids happen to be reading and whether they're taking witchcraft seriously.

Fucking popes.
 
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RugbyBuck said:
I haven't read any of the books because I'm an adult, but I think the Pope has bigger issues with which to deal and should probably worry more about why his priests are fucking kids and why kids and their parents are dying around the world thanks to the anti-condom stance than what kids happen to be reading and whether they're taking witchcraft seriously.

Fucking popes.
No Condoms + no Wacking off = Trouble

that is a world I choose not to live in.
 
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RugbyBuck said:
I haven't read any of the books because I'm an adult, but I think the Pope has bigger issues with which to deal and should probably worry more about why his priests are fucking kids and why kids and their parents are dying around the world thanks to the anti-condom stance than what kids happen to be reading and whether they're taking witchcraft seriously.

Fucking popes.
You can still read when you're all growed up ya know.

Keep in mind, he hasn't addressed Harry Potter since he's been pope. He made some off hand comments about it 2 years ago.
 
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Just a question for all of those out there who love to slam the Catholic Church for their no contraseptive stance...do any of you actually know why they believe as they do? I'd be very interested in knowing if anyone can articulate why the Vatican takes the position it does. My guess is that most of you can't without looking it up and instead are simply reacting because someone is condemning a behavior in which you partake.

I'm not defending the Vatican because I only agree with their stance to a certain degree....I see nothing wrong with a married couple using protection in order to plan their family; however, once I learned why the Vatican believes what it does, I gained a lot of respect for it. (Now if only they would follow their teachings.....but that is another issue.)
 
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