rdfs:comment
| - You see it all the time in the movies and on TV: someone's had a hard day, and needs to to relax, to make the cares and stresses of the workaday world melt away. She draws a bath -- it's (almost) always a she -- lights a number of candles (usually in votive holders), turns off the bathroom light, and, glass of wine in hand, settles in the tub for a Candlelit Bath. It's difficult to understand how anyone could find taking a Candlelit Bath even vaguely relaxing, since its only appearances in popular culture are to establish moments of extreme tension. Examples of Candlelit Bath include:
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abstract
| - You see it all the time in the movies and on TV: someone's had a hard day, and needs to to relax, to make the cares and stresses of the workaday world melt away. She draws a bath -- it's (almost) always a she -- lights a number of candles (usually in votive holders), turns off the bathroom light, and, glass of wine in hand, settles in the tub for a Candlelit Bath. This is invariably the point where the shadow of the serial killer will swish past the mirror, or the ghost will manifest, or a piece of electronic equipment will fall in, or the earthquake will hit, or the scene will abruptly change to bright daylight, with crime scene tape around the tub and someone standing by for a Quip to Black. It's difficult to understand how anyone could find taking a Candlelit Bath even vaguely relaxing, since its only appearances in popular culture are to establish moments of extreme tension. Examples of Candlelit Bath include:
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