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You credit Under the Red Hood’s Bruce Greenwood and Jensen Ackles, but neglect to mention that its Joker was played by John DiMaggio (yes, Bender from Futurama).

You’re right, Trump isn’t smart enough to understand this, but it’s the way his whole life has been shaped. His father gave him his fortune but created the fiction that he was a self-made billionaire. His entire career, his entire sense of self-worth, is a fiction constructed for him, so it’s the only reality he

You’re mistaken to assume that gaslighting is simply a synonym for lying. A liar wants their victim to believe that the lie is the truth. A gaslighter wants their victim to doubt the very concept of truth, to be so unsure of objective reality that their only recourse is submission, to accept what the gaslighter/abuser

I forget which episode it was, but I liked the banner reading “Elf Alley (Formerly Alley).”

My favorite quote (probably paraphrasing here): “Who knew a carpet could have so much backstory?”

Anyone know who played Asmodium? At times, I thought it was Mark Hamill, but sometimes the voice sounded too different and he wasn’t in the credits, so I guess it was someone doing a pretty good Mark Hamill impression.

The most bizarre extension of the Rambo franchise was the 1986 kids’ cartoon Rambo: The Force of Freedom, which put Rambo in a G.I. Joe-knockoff format where he led a small multiethnic team into battle against the forces of the evil General Warhawk (voiced by the great Michael Ansara). Somewhat surprisingly, they

“I’m not sure why Della was so sheepish when she went to tell Scrooge the bad news about the Moonlander invasion. There’s no reason she would be mad at her about that.”

My biggest problem with the episode was its unquestioned assumption that a vast storehouse of corn would somehow not be considered a precious resource in a frontier town. Also, how the heck is the corn still fresh after two or three centuries? (Different works portray Cornelius Coot as a contemporary of either the

I recall reading that the CGI animation in JP was actually done by Tippett’s stop-motion animators using input devices that were basically stop-motion model armatures with joint sensors on them instead of realistic latex exteriors. So they animated the dinosaur models by hand the same way they always had, and that

This finale really underlined how peripheral Liv became to her own show these past couple of seasons. She didn’t really accomplish much in the finale. Don E. cheated her out of her final confrontation with Blaine, because Peyton set him off. Peyton helped the kids escape. Ravi and Major defeated Enzo. And Dolly

Yes, we know who you are.

There are always excuses. Aside from “Rejoined” and the half-hearted, preachy TNG: “The Outcast,” Star Trek under Rick Berman pointedly avoided LGBT+ characters, with the excuse being that they couldn’t find the “right” way to do it — never mind that the obvious way is the way it finally did end up being done in Trek

It’s a stretch to say that Babylon 5 dealt with the issue “directly,” since the extent of it was one scene implying indirectly and nonverbally that Susan Ivanova had shared Talia Winters’s bed the night before, and one line in a later season where Ivanova said “I think I loved Talia.” It was, if anything,

I suspect that Martin did know Liv was Renegade already, that he only pretended not to know her. Why? Because she introduced herself as “Olivia Moore, your daughter,” then shortly thereafter he addressed her as “Liv.” He already knew her non-obvious nickname before she had an opportunity to tell him. So either the

“You might remember Welker from The Simpsons, or from the new Scooby Doo.”

No; from what I’ve read about them, the original comics were much darker and more cynical, not a comedy at all, with the MiB being a sinister black-ops group dealing with all sorts of paranormal and supernatural phenomena (not just aliens), as likely to kill witnesses as neuralyze them, and having an agenda to control

The first season was great, with smart, character-driven writing, although the character designs were an acquired taste. Unfortunately, after that, the good writers moved to Godzilla: The Series and the show got increasingly dumbed down, sacrificing the character depth in favor of gimmickry and an increasing obsession

You’re right that tornadoes are more common in southwest Ohio. When I was a kid in Cincinnati in the ‘70s, tornado warnings were a common occurrence, and tornadoes were probably my biggest childhood fear. They do seem to have become somewhat less common in subsequent decades, but we still get tornado warnings at

Worth noting that while the original Showa-era Gamera films were deeply cheesy, dumb, and cheaply made, the ‘90s Gamera reboot trilogy is among the best kaiju movies ever made, with smart, dark, and powerful storytelling and superb visual effects. And the 2006 Gamera the Brave, while returning to a child-friendly