TheUltimateTeaCup
The Ultimate Tea Cup
TheUltimateTeaCup

When I was a kid a meteorite struck in farmland where I lived. Well, before we knew it we had an outbreak of The Colour causing all sorts of problems. Vegetable production increase, but we couldn't sell it. Livestock were dying and people started saying "The Phantom Menace" was a good movie. Well, we eventually

I would assume it is because Asia already has native rabbit species, as well as hares taking the same niche in the ecosystem and predators to keep them in check.

Putting aside how cute that video is, and how cool Patrick Stewart was to play along, why was "Hippo Butt Explosion" the next video?

Awesome movie - I my teenage self especially like the huge tri-blade sword that shoot swords!

Yup, that's a heartin'.

Watching it when it originally aired meant being able to enjoy the slow-burn plot week to week, while ignoring the sometimes rabid complaints about the lack of action and how supposedly nothing ever happened.

Either that, or an action movie waiting to be made.

More importantly, how did the juvenile graffiti that was at the nearby high school get to the abandoned freeway?

HR be damned, I'm watchin' it!

I can't wait for "Alien vs. Predators 3: Yahtzee!"

Something came untucked revealing her superpower.

That left me wondering if they installed a backdoor (*snicker*) in Andy, and if that would be a plot point in a later episode.

Japan has had ties to China (and Korea) for centuries, so a lot of "Japanese" culture is based on Chinese (or even Korean) culture - a lot more than some Japanese would like to admit - and was imported well before the more recent sour relations (to put it mildly). Because of this, Chinese stories such as "Journey to

I seem to have inadvertently stepped on some toes here.

And this is on Jezebel because?

Yes, two very geographically and culturally close nations sharing stories? Inconceivable! It would be like the French writing stories about King Arthur.

Now playing

The Japanese adaption "Monkey" ([en.wikipedia.org] will always remain the definitive version for me, simply because that is what I was brought up on - oh, and it was extremely awesome.

Don't leave us in suspense! What sort of can was it? Paint? Hairspray? This is vital information.

I watched "The Ribos Operation" on Netflix streaming last week and it was great - the rubber suit monster was unintentionally hilarious, but the plot and dialog (by Douglas Adams, I believe) was great.

I've said it before, but the new Dr. Who scripts seem more and more like fanfics to me - that's not to say I don't enjoy them, but when I compare them to old Dr. Who (i.e., Jon Pertwee and Tom Baker episodes) they seem so full of posturing and self-importance.