RabbitRabbit
RabbitRabbit
RabbitRabbit

Not only that - but I’m guessing margins were tight because they used established IP. 

Hope they get paid. The Wolf Among Us is a favorite game of mine personally.

They may have looked into it, but their interpretation may not be correct.

The WARN act payments would come out of the pockets of the people who shut the company down. I was at a company who was shut down by a bank, nearly 500 people lost their jobs over night. The bank that bought the company was required to pay every single one of us 2 months pay. The WARN act requires you to inform your

Friendly Reminder: DO NOT SUPPORT THIS COMPANY ANY FURTHER. No matter how much you love the series, they screwed over almost every single employee, and every employee involved in the TWD, supporting any further efforts they make that don’t put money into the people who got fired is a huge mistake

BaE reads like he wants the chance to break up with her. The comments about how the tables have turned with him being out of her league (to, what, her being out of his league?), and how he needs to confirm he’s out of love with her. I think it’s less about closure, and more about being the one who got dumped.

The BaE story makes me think there’s a lot more from the GF’s side that’s being left out. Even from his own story, he basically admits that he was horrible to live with for the past year; she has no obligation to him to give him anything or any time to fix himself, especially after she already put up with it for said

Until Dawn was, surprisingly, not that bad in terms of jump scares; I went in fully expecting it to be a rapid-fire jump-scare fest, but it was actually pretty well balanced. I enjoyed it a lot more than I thought I would.

And the last sentence is why I often opt out of horror movies or games. The stories and lore are often interesting enough in their own right, but I do not handle jump scares. At all.*

Yea they gather all their piss and shit and dump it in parking lots in Reno. Very responsible!

I don’t think this is right. Specifically, I think that in Season 4 (and some of the earlier seasons), Bojack’s struggle was about processing the bad things that happened to him, like his relationship with his mom and all her cruelty. It was about airing out and acknowledging the past. Then Season 5 is about him

Air BNB.

I know that Burning Man and its surrounding acts are sometimes a questionable interpretation of the word “art”, but I’ll be damned if there isn’t something strangely surreal and beautiful about part of a 747 sitting alone in a Nevada desert. 

That quote, along with all his talk of what he plans to do (sell some more cars, build a pole barn, work on a few cars, etc.) are classic hoarder rhetoric. Hoarders have always got a rationalization, and they’re always thinking of that next thing that they’re of course going to do but never actually get around to

It’s not a collection. It’s neglected rusted junk. None of these cars will ever run again.

This isn’t a collection, it’s hoarding.

Honestly, I’m a lot more satisfied with this update than most of the previous ones, because it sounds like the dude is making progress and that his attitude has improved dramatically. More than that, he realizes that the cars that he left in his yard for decades aren’t in the same condition he thought they were in

He has plenty left that should be scrapped, so if he scrapped any that shouldn’t have been, that’s on him.

Good. We have as similar hoarder in my community, and his very visible collection of junk is an eyesore. If this guy had at least 50% of his collection stored inside and out of sight, with the rest in a well maintained and kept area, id be a bit more sympathetic. This is just a junkyard. 

OH YAY this guy again. I made it to here in the article and gave up