"Achievement unlocked: made PETA look more reasonable than me"
"Achievement unlocked: made PETA look more reasonable than me"
Least favorite moments from web 1.0: when the link you're looking for is marquee'ing rapidly and you have to try to time your click just right to visit it.
Deathwing (World of Warcraft) was a pretty big jerk.
I think the scene where we learned about the Winchester brothers' connection to the Men of Letters was a legit flashback though, and it did change them forever.
Guy Gavriel Kay's Tigana - the moment when the identity of the broken jester Rhun is revealed.
Then there was the moment she was able to increment the number.
Eating french toast while looking out upon the first gentle but steady snowfall of the year.
Nope. Most of what we know of as "Star Trek" happened since 1977.
Last year the fandom said, amidst the grousing over "Bloodlines," we'd totally watch an "Alex Annie Alexis Ann" spinoff. Buzzing for a Sheriff Mills spinoff has been going on for a while now.
It's not clear they would have found the ark, because Indy found it for them; so he DID have an effect on the outcome.
Hmm. Was some proportion of that oral contact only? Or does that not even "count"?
This actually tells us a lot of things. For one, the stormtroopers are no longer clones of Jengo Fett and at least some of them will be sympathetic, or in other words, no longer mooks. Some group is still running around using Rebel tech. So: some remnants of the imperial military have become friendly to the…
I believe anyone who says they were raped. Straight up.
Translated from the corp-speak, what they mean is, "We see that Marvel's killin' it, and we think it's because superhero movies have a wider market appeal than horror, and so we're going to make superhero movies with these familiar characters and hope it works."
Episodes everybody pretends never happened: Seasons 5 and 6 of Xena, generally.
Not to mention, there was a terrible plot hole in this episode. They were able to reverse the mutations and restore Janeway and Paris back to normal. So... if a reversible mutation was the only thing keeping them from transwarping back home... why didn't they?
Picture a single continuous organism that covers the whole surface of a planet. If, say, a local group of cells change in some way, and these changes are adopted by nearby cells, thereby propagating changes and mutations throughout the organism, would that be considered Darwinian evolution?
All I want for gamer Christmas is a Diablo 3 Map Editor.
That's how I read it - he was calling the movies make-believe, thus implying that it's not really a matter of significance who gets "their own" movie.
No love for this one?