Ditto.
Ditto.
A lot of crows come to my backyard looking for peanuts, but this group of five was different. They were scrappy,…
Why do people dignify her lunacy by calling it a 'philosophy'? Calling Ayn Rand a philosopher is like calling Deepak Chopra a scientist.
I love me some Anson Mount and Hell on Wheels just keeps getting better and better as it goes on. Would love to see him in the Warcraft movie.
The reason some of us consider eating animal ethically wrong but all of us are happy to eat plants is that animals, unlike plants, have a central nervous system, the capability to feel pain, and to a certain arguable extent a consciousness. Quite apart from anything, animals clearly grasp the concept of death, and…
Actually, he does. Very much.
I've seen a number of his movies - I've yet to see one I didn't enjoy. I'm willing to take his word on this one.
"The fact that you saw such a passionate response in the blogosphere is really kind of a testament to the love that people have for this character and by the way, there are five lights.”
Kurt Russell is not Colonel O'Neill
This sounds -exactly- like the setup for the 90s cop/android show Mann & Machine. Created by non other than Dick Wolf (Law & Order).
Haha this show is just unapologetically iRobot huh? Haha oh well I'll watch it anyway.
Forget a remake/reboot of Starship Troopers. They should do a movie of John Steakley's Armor. Loved this book. Don't care what anyone says.
Cultured meat grown in labs sounds better doesn't it?
You're right about Firefly. However I disagree about Castle. It has a certain self-deprecatory quality you don't find in a lot of shows.
You... just called Stevie Nicks alt-country.
Elon Musk is not a human being. He's a space alien who crash landed in Africa in the early 90s. Since then he's been following a logical path to developing the technologies to get himself home.
This was recently addressed on the Slate podcast "Lexicon Valley". They observe that the 1903 edition of the OED included a definition for the ironical use of the word "literally" and a citation for that usage from 1863. The hosts then go on to discuss Charles Dickens using the word "literally" to mean…
Empire Records. Always. Oh, a bunch of people are over and we don't know what to watch? Boom. Oh, we left the DVD menu playing too long and the movie started over? Perfect.
This is one of those series I always try to make people enjoy, and then when they don't I think less of them.
I may or may not be a little excited for this.