Trike
Trike
Trike

Stay off the Internet. Go outside and play with your friends.

why does your imagination look like a penis?

Oh FFS. Can't we melt down cars or something?

I don't disagree with your intent, but the tone was unnecessarily harsh.

There should be a flow chart that asks: "Is this medical doctor/psychologist/philosopher full of shit?" with an arrow to "Was he endorsed by Oprah Winfrey?" then to "Yes" which points directly to "Totally full of shit."

No one ever found something new by staying on the path.

Yeah, I have a hard time feeling bad for people duped by such things. It makes me sound heartless, but ignorance isn't genetic: you can eliminate it by doing a small amount of research.

Ironically, some of the posters I liked the most this year were from movies I didn't see.

Inertia is a powerful thing. How many oldsters do you see driving new Cadillacs with the faux convertible top installed? That's because all the cool cars from the 1930s owned by celebrities were convertibles. Even that weird little S-shaped design on the vinyl is a relic of that era: it represents the hinge that

Except for the kid in the leather coat, most of these shots are of people commuting to/from work or school. Lots of people dressed casually back then. I know this because I have dozens of family photos from NYC during that era, although none are scanned. It's easy to find shots of people not dressed to the nines,

You can console yourself retroactively with the fact it's mostly not true.

If you want the latest releases on streaming, you'll have to buy a la carte. Netflix gets new releases on streaming occasionally, but it's mostly relegated to disc. I don't recall if movies come out the same day on disc because I don't really pay attention to it. That's not Netflix's call, that's the way the studios

Which of the non-tablet e-ink versions of Kindle is best? I used a second-gen one and liked it because I could use it on the back porch in sunshine, unlike my iPad which is nearly impossible to see under those conditions.

Jimmy Carter, Buzz Aldrin, Davy Crockett, Mickey Spillane, Eddie Rickenbacker... not sure your hypothesis holds up.

I remember some TV show were a guy had two copies of Action Comics #1. He feeds one into a shredder and the protagonist exclaims, "Why did you do that?!" And the villain replies, "Because now this one is worth three times as much."

They want to keep the money coming in. That's the end of it. They're used to being the gatekeepers and have grown fat being that way.

I had three of these books. I don't know if there were more. The other two I had were "Great Space Battles" and "Spacewreck."

I cut out that Apollo-Soyuz cutaway and still have it today.

I disagree. There was an episode of M*A*S*H that has stuck with me for decades that addresses this. (I know, I'm quoting a sitcom — stick with me here.) A helicopter pilot is selling trinkets that little kids are risking their lives to get. He pays them pennies and sells the items for big money; meanwhile, the kids

It kind of sounds like Williams is saying just that. Or, at the very least, diminishing the problems of one group if not outright dismissing them. I'll cut her some slack since she's a kid, though, and she was just speaking off the cuff.