JudasAsparagus
JudasAsparagus
JudasAsparagus

The black area isn't empty... that's where they're hiding the dark matter.

If you have to distract students with puppies to make the solution work, there may be a better solution.

Why don't scientists just cave in and admit that the universe was created by the 24-dimensional God Biscuit?

Superman gets a reboot (Superman Returns) in the same year they make yet another Batman movie, a la Batman Begins. Why must we relive 2006?

But what does all this say about our potential to be addicted to brains?

Why do tards insist on rehashing old material to create 'new' sci-fi?

I like oranges, and I like brushing my teeth, but I don't like orange-flavored toothpaste.

This is what I've been waiting for: Independent scientific verification to my hypothesis that the universe both sucks and blows at the same time.

I think I found a spoiler for 'The Event' over at zombo.com

Pimping Miss Daisy.

Now playing

@WitDickman: Lol... just tongue in cheek really. But seriously, what are the odds we will get stuck with a lame soundtrack, rehashing over-used bands like Filter and Fuel? It's a comic about Norsemen... so we need viking metal... like Dragonforce!

@jetRink: Amen. And bring back The Dresden Files.

Sounds like the scifi equivalent of a Segway scooter. Overloading on hype cannot overcome lack of substance.

Silly scientists. The universe isn't expanding: Light is the constant, being that it is the only thing in the universe that doesn't move. Petty organic creatures (like us) are doing the actual moving, and we are gradually losing intertia, which leads to a false perception of expansion.

On the screen, Neil Patrick Harris was the original Dr. Horrible.

@nutnics: No one really knows what is happening, they only observe the evidence that it does. I'm no expert but here goes:

Calvino's Invisible Cities. All of them.

@nutnics: Massive objects curve space/time. The photons don't react to the mass, but they are still affected by the curvature.