I think I remember reading about a guy in Washington state who died from a ruptured colon, but there is no way in hell I'm Googling it to find the article. Probably mentioned somewhere on Seattle's free weekly The Stranger's website.
I think I remember reading about a guy in Washington state who died from a ruptured colon, but there is no way in hell I'm Googling it to find the article. Probably mentioned somewhere on Seattle's free weekly The Stranger's website.
"She's not just getting back at him; he has a wife who didn't do anything wrong and is getting all kinds of shat on in public. He has a child that will probably one day see this."
I couldn't care less about the sexual details in and of themselves, but yes, when something like this happens and shows what a moron a politician is, the upside is definitely one less stupid person in a position of power.
I watched the whole season a couple weeks ago. I found myself laughing quite a lot once it got going. But like others have commented, it has a lot of non-funny moments, and many of them are quite good, as well.
I haven't seen much with either of them, I just wanted to add that I thought I didn't like Munn until I saw her on Conan last week. She was funnier than I thought she'd be, and the fact that Andy Richter and Jeff Garlin sitting next to her were cracking up is a pretty strong recommendation.
I think Roseanne and Tom Arnold are both pretty funny people (who have been involved in some terrible projects), but the fact that she didn't get that his initial remark was a joke is just mind boggling. She really is one of those people who only comprehends the first three words out of someone's mouth before she…
I blasted through the whole season in about three days last week. I liked it a lot, although I thought the aggressiveness of the ending came out of left field. I wish there were more shows with this kind of meandering feeling to it, just quirky character stuff most of the time. The best comparison I can think of is …
I'm not really sure how or if this is relevant, but almost every clip that uses the phrase "one man" looks like it came from an absolutely shitty movie.
I once put up a poster for John Carpenter's Halloween in my bedroom. It soon occurred to me that if someone showed up in my bedroom for the first time, a picture of a serial killer would be the last thing they'd probably want to see. But then I looked around, saw the other poster with an obscure superhero on it, and…
"As NPR notes, the dolls are so thin that you have to remove their hands in order to dress them."
I remember some of the sketches on her original show on MTV were pretty awesomely strange. One about were-slugs, and one about a dumpy office mail clerk who has a crush on Jenny, who ignores him, but actually has an insane stalker-crush on him. The mail clerk crush sketch in particular was incredibly bizarre, or at…
I'm amazed when people post stuff like that. Just one stupid comment that finds its way to the wrong person could lose you your job, if not your whole career.
"...they think it's a personal attack when someone else is different."
I haven't played it yet, but this is apparently as close as anyone has gotten to a Twin Peaks game:
Could we get about 90 more minutes of the Alan Cumming video?
I had a basal cell on my head when I was 31. In the waiting room when I went to get it removed, it was a little unsettling that everyone else there was over 60. Now, three years later, I finally bought a hat, because I'm probably stupid.
I stand corrected. Although, I doubt the writers of Scandal have their history straight when they use the word "gladiator" either. And either way, lawyers referring to themselves as gladiators is obnoxious.
I once worked with a guy who told a story more than once about how he didn't remember driving home one time, then woke up in his car the next morning covered in vomit. I don't understand how anyone would think that sounds anything other than stupid as shit.
And Netflix has at least one season. That's where I tried watching it.
"...the protective thing goes hand-in-hand with her calling herself a gladiator. That's what warriors do: Protect."
Gladiators didn't really protect anything; they were slaves who fought to the death for the amusement of others. I actually gave up on the first episode when they started using the gladiator metaphor,…