For most of Florida, the gray represents old people. In Miami, the blue represents sadness.
For most of Florida, the gray represents old people. In Miami, the blue represents sadness.
And even more amazing is the very next play, he was turned around on a fly ball and caught it over the wrong shoulder.... started off looking like jose canseco, ended up looking like willie mays
Uh, doesn't he have to tag him
what about the tallest jockey?
If you stacked all these professional athletes on top of each other, the ones on the bottom would be crushed and the ones on top would become too unstable and fall off; most likely resulting in a fatal injury.
How are these flags attached?
Gwyneth Paltrow descends the stairs of her summer home in Southhampton wearing a gorgeous Ralph Lauren gown. Chris Martin sits at the piano in the sun room, writing a future number one hit. The children are dancing and laughing.
Evil Bran? I don't think so. Hodor don't play that.
We don't frame this as happening in season four — we just say we hope he survives season four in one piece, but that he has loftier ambitions for where his character will end up. Nobody would suggest that what he's describing would happen this year.
I thought that was the Dos Equis guy.
"I don't always find treasure, but when I do..."
The problem is that when taling income inequality, the 95th percentile isn't that far off from the median. Maybe double or at most triple, while the top .1% can have an income 200x the median.
Comparing the 95th percentile doesn't really show the inequality. The 95th percentile in NYC is right around $250,000/yr.…
I'm pretty sure this chart's methodology is flawed. Kentuckians were just describing the science behind childbirth.
Yeah, it was rather grotesque manipulation of the audience. The show brings up these issues but doesn't actually want to explore them, which is weird. Plus, the whole "home shoots intruding teen" seemed to be a metaphorical reference to the all-too-frequent real-life reports of the shooting of innocent teenagers by…
An automated security system that just outright kills intruders without issuing any sort of auditory or visual warning seems like it would be a nightmare for the company's legal department.
I think it was an interesting allegory to the drone debate - patrol the US cities and will they have deadly force capabilities?
Immediately thought the memory was connected to his synthetic soul, then came up with a theory: synthetic souls are comprised from real human memories, and eventually those memories either develop more and try to regain control, or the synthetics like Dorian can't handle the revelation they used to be somebody else…
Hell, half the time the MX's aren't even treated like a piece of expensive equipment. I don't know of ANY police force where you can pull out your gun and put a bullet through the engine block of your squad-car and still get to KEEP YOUR BADGE. The MX's are treated more like, say, a bullet proof vest mixed with a…
Agreed. MX models have no feelings, so you don't feel empathy with them as you would Dorian. It's kind of like how fish can't scream or blink. It makes them much easier to dismember and use as bait.
It's clear to me that the synthetics are considered property by most people. How many MX models has Kennex destroyed because he was ticked off with them? No one is trying to charge him with murder. It's treated like he destroyed some expensive equipment like a squad car.
The Doom that Came to A Shoggoth on the Roof