AmericasWang
America's Wang
AmericasWang

My bad.

Would you know these shoes are on the market if not this alleged fuck up?

A gaffe worth millions in marketing.

Architecture students are like virgins with an itch they cannot scratch. Never build a building till you’re fifty—what kind of life is that?

Fine....“blood cheating” and “mechanical cheating.” So less clunky. Happy?

Thanks very much...very elucidating. How many AUs is a parsec again?

The obvious question: how far away is it?

Also “orbiting” suggests our galaxy is holding it in its gravitational sway...is that really the case?

Now playing

Everyone knows the megalodon movie subsubgenre achieved perfection in 2002 with this vignette.

Avatar 4: InnerSpace in...errr...space(?)

You’re right...I jumped to post that in reaction to the first part of your assertion w/out taking in the rest (and was about to make an edit to that effect). It establishes the existence but not the proximity...but given the spottiness of the fossil record it can’t be known for certain Giganto or a cousin thereof

Wrong.

I’m certainly not a true believer, but your “we have bones from animals hundreds of millions of years old why doen’t we have any bones from Bigfoot?” argument doesn’t hold water. The fossilization necessary to preserve those ancient bones happened under the most extraordinary of circumstances and resulted in said

Fine...”lip service to making things hard sciencey.”

I thought hard science as an afterthought (at best) was a defining trait of space opera—thus precluding Star Trek.

In your write-up you correctly describe air as being “more compressible” than water whereas in the video the main gentleman twice describes water as “incompressible.” While liquid’s lack of compressibility is of course the key to hydraulics, water still is compressible enough that ssea level would be 100' or so

If you thought that was authentic, the gene pool cannot afford you.

Very enlightening and yet intuitively seems tiny for the most vast event horizon yet discovered.

Of course it does.

The impact took place March 17th per the article (yes— not exactly in keeping with the headline).