Stytch
Stytch
Stytch

I guess? Here’s my thing: I think he’s a sniveling, odious turd—but I don’t think his take on ‘what a woman is’ requires all that much deconstruction or analysis for a couple of reasons. First, because he’s probably cribbing this position from other Right wingers (as opposed to having personally deliberated upon the

XX chromosomes, no tallywacker.

Generally I do not need to know we my email is read and I prefer Google not know every site I log into.

Being another old geezer with a active AOL account I say, what point is there for changing? Will my email get there any faster? Will I be cooler and grow hair in my bald spot with gmail?

I never pay to pay, or pay to shop.  Never with Amazon Prime, never with Costco, never with any club stores.  That’s just stupid.  And Amazon retaliates against people who think that way, with three-tiered shipping that takes 2 weeks to go 120 miles.  Bezos ain’t going to space on my dime.

I mean, if DTV is the only major distributor carrying that garbage, why aren’t they attacking the rest of the major distributors for not carrying it?

Because I wanted to see if it could give me enough tips to make it worth it for me to do it myself. And after I read the article I’m still 99% sure I couldn’t do as good of a job as a Costco chicken and it would probably cost me double in price and double in time.

Now I want to see a musical episode, if for no other reason than to really fuck with all of us.

Dang, I thought you mean it’s teasing the next episode will be a musical.

Oh boy oh boy oh boy, this is great! Yet another reason to tilt at parking meters that don’t have old-skool coin support.

Masks are not just about the person wearing them, they are to protect others around you. Being vaxxed means you most likely won’t die, but doesn’t mean you can get sick ... and pass it on to others ... without even knowing it.

This totally reminds of the time that government agency found some kid at Harvard who convinced other students to upload all kinds of information about themselves to a database and then asked him to scale it up globally. Then in a twist, it was used as as tool in an attempted insurrection against that very same

It sits at the intersection of victims tech savvy enough to scan a QR code and tech-unsavvy enough to do so.

I don’t agree. Both of Burton’s films have great scenes of Keaton as Wayne, such as Keaton being eccentric and charming at the party in the beginning of Batman and Keaton and Pheiffer figuring out each other’s identities in Returns.

I wouldn’t be so sure. Not everybody is wired to respond to punishment in the way it is intended.

I know what you mean...so could someone please go ahead and spoil the book for me, and give us the story that’s alluded to above? Thanks...

Why would you say something so absurdly untrue? In the last 20 years Gaiman has written or co-written 7 novels, not even counting Norse Mythology in 2016. American Gods (2001), Anansi Boys (2005), The Graveyard Book (2008), and more.

1. I will note that the only reason I’m 100% on board for this is because this story is based on the followup novel that Gaiman and Pratchett started to work on right after Good Omens was written. The only reason why we didn’t get it is because life got in the way for both of them and it never got written. Sir Terry

Good Omens and, to an even greater extent, True Blood were examples where I really enjoyed both the show and the book despite them being quite different in many ways. I though Good Omens did a great job visualizing a complex story that seems like it would be pretty darn hard to film, but what made it great was the

Larson published the story with Dorland’s letter pretty much verbatim as an audiobook.