Batlife
Batlife
Batlife

So someone with two jobs, one as a CEO, has time to moonlight at night as a vigilante? when she's not digging into Ben and Jerry's and crying over Mr. Wrong? I cannot wait for this to get canceled.

@Dented: I've had the same reaction to his recent work and wondered if it was just me getting jaded.

Aggressive kiosk people and chatty sales ladies are my bete noire. But I might welcome robots, if only so I could say something a lot more vehement and profane than "Just looking, thanks."

@serenada: He has a British accent, that's Brit enough for me.

@HidingInCanada: It's in keeping with our British Spiderman (Andrew Garfield.)

"Oscar's panting poltergeist" indeed.

Heh. I remember at my first job telling my bosses about this thing I was excited to try called "the Net." I was sure it was going to be huge. They responded with benevolent condescension and told me they'd never heard of it so clearly I'd been duped.

Tiffany reminds me of the girl in the old Whitesnake videos, Tawny Kitaen.

The lit major in me wants The Awakening to be a Chopin sequel where Edna comes back out of the ocean as a zombie and is "repressed" no more.

@MondoVampire: I dream of an animated Goreyesque show.

More goth, less Steampunk. And I'm guessing no jailbait Virginia.

@oserus: I've heard a lot of people say that will be the wave of the future - bundled pricing, where you buy the hard copy and get a digital as well.

@zephyrkey: Glad it's not just me. I've even been hunting down copies of my favorite childhood books, since my parents gave them all away.

@phoghat: I'm just the opposite. I only use my Kindle on the plane/at gym. I love physical books and my library is my favorite room of the house... I love being surrounded by towering bookshelves.

I don't think paper books are going away entirely. But it's probably digital natives whose consumption will decide that, not my generation.

The faux pas of putting a collar on the domme is one of my pet peeves, but otherwise this looks beautifully ridiculous.

Beautiful clavicles. Just what I've always associated with Adama.

And now I've added these facts to my bat elevator speech to make people realize how valuable and fascinating bats are. Great post.

How did Sally fall down the stairs without her fiance hearing it? He said when she didn't come back to bed, he looked for her. Huh? If someone fell down the stairs in my house at bedtime, it would be loud. Are we to assume he killed her?

@Jenn2D2: Had the same feeling. and so far the three main women feel very one-dimensional. The goofy nurse, predatory Rebecca, perky Sally - there just isn't any depth there yet. Since Sally is a main character, we need to eventually see something of her identity beyond pining for her fiance.