NotSarahWalker
NotSarahWalker
NotSarahWalker

Bonus points if they fight crime.

Plus, her current arc has the most brilliant takedown of the White Savior complex I have ever seen. Carol's greatest strength and ultimately her greatest flaw, is her unflinching ability to go chin-first into battle...when sometimes she might need to stop and think things through.

My favorite part of working at Taco Bell was the number of ways people pronounced "quesadilla."

Greg Berlanti.

I don't really have strong feelings one way or the other, but I do have to admit, I adore them for the sheer Pavlovian "Yummm" you can make people say when you sing, "Red Robin!"

Huh. I wonder why that is. The people I know that read DF are all writers, so we all kind of groaned at the twist.

Even Captain Hook hates Cruella Deville.

Ooh, we have a Red Robin here. I'll add them to my list of "probably okay to try!" Thank you for the tip!

That twist was *cheating*. Just downright, no good, filthy, rotten cheating. As a writer, it disgusted me (even though there was precedent with Harry lying to the audience).

I love restaurants that have allergen menus and servers that don't look askance at you when you ask for them. I love, even more, allergen menus that actually include MSG information, and I tend to increase my tip whenever a restaurant does. I'm sensitive to both MSG and tyramine-heavy food to the point where I had

Yeah. I usually have to bide my time for that part of the book where Harry starts finally making the plot make sense. But Deux ex machina describes a lot of the final plots, especially since Harry takes delight in being the worst reliable narrator ever (I get tired of him keeping secrets from the audience to punch up

I think it was more to do with Clarke being a rebel in the books, apparently. I am very confused about why they would get rid of Wells and give us Finn, who's shown to be the moral compass of the show despite committing a pretty serious crime (depriving people of oxygen) and then not even feeling guilty when his

You have *exquisite* taste! Yeah, it's been a couple of decades now for sure, yeah? Or at least 17 or 18 years. Like, the kid Charity and Michael named after Harry is a teenager (ha, Hank). And then you compare and contrast that to the In Death books by JD Robb where only like two years have passed in canon, and it's

My friend that's going through the books right now (apparently Abby was added by the show) keeps referring to Clarke as Paul Newman. I am...infinitely curious about why.

I dragged my sister all over the Salt Lake City airport to see if he'd signed anything recently (he goes through and signs things at airports), but alas, no luck. I did, however, pick up the Rithmatist and ensure that I didn't get anything productive done on my next flight.

I think you're the first person I've seen that's had anything nice to say about the actual books for the 100. I just marathoned the show instead of the 50 projects I've got due, and I really, really liked it.

I wasn't sure I wanted to continue after Changes. Ghost Story and Cold Days were more of a chore to get through than a joy, but I started to warm up to the series again after Skin Game. I will love Murphy until the end of my days. I know she's not always the most popular character with people, but I have such a soft

VIIIIIIIIIIIIIIN. I love the Mistborn books and I'm eagerly awaiting the next in the series that takes place a couple hundred years later. Sanderson's use of religion and society, plus his worldbuilding, it just blows my mind.

Salmon ladder gif party!

They guzzle this down like water. When I worked out there, Wölffer was one of our clients and we always had like 6 bottles of this stuff around the office. I sadly never developed a taste for it, but I'm sure being constantly drunk or on red bull would have made the 90-hour workweeks easier. Maybe next time.