TyroneTyrone
TyroneTyrone
TyroneTyrone

Am I the only one who liked Charlie Hunnam in there? Everybody seems to trash on him, haven't seen one good thing said about his stuff. Ok he's not the greatest actor but I find he's a good change of pace from the usual acting we get in these movies.

Amanda Bynes' STDs are legendary. She doesn't just have crabs - she has dancing lobsters.

"Some of my best STDs are from black people!"

WORM SIGN!

And yet she hasn't done the black thing* that would probably upset him the most...

I have so many problems with this article that I don't even know where to start. While I respect the author's attempt to draw attention to Miley's supposed cultural appropriation, I cannot cosign with her oversimplified notion of dances, words, and fashion belonging to specific ethnic groups. So your argument is

Girl, why did you make me spill my expensive, loose leaf tea? LOL Miley is just doing that typical, "let me piss off daddy with black things" crap.

I like you, Dodai Stewart, but I can't support you this time. You can't have this one both ways: either pop music created by non-dominant cultures is open to enjoyment and emulation by people outside that culture, or it is off limits to anyone not from that background and we therefor can't complain about limited sales

I kind of wonder what it's like to be a black person who isn't interested in any of those things and have white people constantly telling you that those things are a part of your identity and you should be so attached to them that you get mad when white people try to take them from you.

Am I the only person who thinks it would be helpful to stop defining racial boundaries in terms of clothing and dance moves and fingernails? Saying "these clothes are for black people," "these dance moves are for black people," "this manicure is for black people" is far more cringe-inducing than a pop star with bad

Lil' Debbie approves

It's sad to think about the fact that the homeless man's IQ is probably the same as Javale's basketball IQ.

Right? I feel like people really misread that movie. And Ricardo's Khan was fantastic, but good grief, CumberKhan was brutal. 'YOU SHOULD HAVE LET ME SLEEEEP!'

Also that "Touching scene" where Kirk dies was lame lame LAME! How long have they known each other? two years? In the actual universe where it was actually spock dying they had known each other for a five year mission and beyond that five movies? So, it meant something more than...hey lets steal the thunder from an

Definitely seconding this. Ricardo's Khan was smart, tough, with incredible charisma and a fantastic flair. The one by Benedict Cummerbund was "Generic English Villian 32-A: Science Fiction Action Movie Addition".

Not that it's the actor's fault, it was the flimsy script.

SPOILERS

Inspired by the unexpected Ben Linus vote, I put forward El Tigre:

I don't like the new take on Khan. Old Khan was way scarier. New Khan doesn't have enough story, or background. Into Darkness was a let down too. For 80% of the movie I was like "I can't wait to buy this movie", then it ended and I was scratching my head asking my self, what the hell did I just watch?

In the first season of Lost In Space Dr. Smith was a de facto KGB agent bent on sabotaging the mission, which he succeeded in doing, but Jonathan Harris did a 180 degree about face with the character which became so popular that they dropped the original premise. The robot was a bit scary as well:

I DIE?!?!?! WTF?!?!