HeyMcFly
HeyMcFly
HeyMcFly

I know that many will disagree, but I can't bring myself to consider David Carr a bad quarterback per se. It seemed like after a season or two behind that atrocious line he developed PTSD and lost his ability to stand in the pocket and run his progressions; taking a dive rather than a sack became preferable, in his

Hopefully for him, it's not the ACL or MCL. It might have just been a dislocated kneecap. Still painful and can sideline you for awhile (believe me), but not as bad as injuring those ligaments.

As someone whose knee chronically dislocates itself, yeah; that's just his knee giving out. He didn't trip or anything.

Ask anyone who has ever had a knee injury. Looks like he might have dislocated his kneecap. It's not the banking, it's not him tripping over anything. His knee just gives out on him.

I don't believe the OP said they did. Poor guy just pointed out that (American) networks aren't going to be crazy about this.

I'm all for recognizing soccer's primacy around the world, but it's pretty annoying to see backlash like this when someone merely recognizes that in the US, football is still king.

I almost feel bad for celebrities. They can't get drunk at a public event without someone shoving a microphone in front of them.

Screeners are sent to the voters, and the rules require that voters must have seen all of the nominees. And, of course, the entire Academy follows those rules to the letter. Because no one has ever disregarded a rule, especially when accountability essentially boils down to the honor system.

None of those, save for Blackfish, really go to the author's point. You need to look at the subject matter, not the films themselves. Roger Ebert (Life Itself) and a random family's history (Stories We Tell) don't have that broad appeal. At this point, the plight of an orca whale (Blackfish) doesn't either—animal

I'd rather Stewart take on the mantle of NBC news, or something along those lines. He's spent 16 years lambasting television news, and made a persuasive case for how it has undermined our polity.

The uniforms, shields, marked car, and flashing red-and-blue lights weren't enough identification for this guy? Not that I'm saying the police response wasn't disproportionate, but c'mon.

Those "steps" weren't really him advancing the ball—as soon as he came down from the high point of his jump, with the ball in his hands, it was pretty clear that he was going to the ground. So, he had to complete the act of catching the ball through that fall to the ground. He did not.

Again, that does not equate to "the DA declined to indict," and it ignores cases where the DA presented — and re-presented, after a prior indictment was dismissed — and clearly wanted an indictment for an officer-involved shooting, but no true bill was returned.

No, it's not. There are good examples of grand juries returning no true bill when the District Attorney was clearly hoping for one.

You're right, those words are infuriating because you apparently don't understand the criminal justice system. Grand juries, not district attorneys, decide whether to vote an indictment.

The stainless steel is wrapped around the aluminum, not the other way around.

The stainless steel is wrapped around the aluminum, not the other way around.

Get a new roommate.

Except, of course, there were other witnesses who corroborated Wilson's narrative of events.

I think you mean they were going over the game plans on their Microsoft Surface tablets—the official tablet of the NFL!