WillaCatheter
WillaCatheter
WillaCatheter

The show is really good! And it shares a lot with Bojack. So imagine if a bunch of men went around saying “I’m proud to be like Bojack!” and quizzing women about Horsin’ Around episode titles and sending death threats to Lisa Hanawalt. You’d probably be really mad at those men!

Yeah, I’ll go one step further—men shouldn’t HAVE knees. Let’s remove these disrespect-enabling sissy joints and replace them with spiked balls of iron, perfect for kicking ISIS ass or hanging onto the hunk of steak we’re eating while we drop that 427 into the El Camino. Because America Muscle Freedom Eagle!

Well the problem is she’s never gotten head.

30 commenters so far, most complaining, none doing what needed to be done. You’re welcome.

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Referencing a Gawker blind item is like reprinting something scribbled on a bathroom stall and saying, “See? People are talking about this.” It is very irresponsible to hold a man’s reputation hostage until he denies (to your liking) unsourced rumors that don’t even mention him by name.

Yeah, you’re a troll.

My only regret is that I only have one “Recommend” to give to this post.

Thank you for this. Needed solid, surprise laugh today. Gratefully accepted.

David Gerrold spoke quite lovingly of Pournelle, who he had raging political arguments with. He also spoke of the battles Pournelle and Harlan Ellison had, also over his right/libertarian politics, but that the two were in fact very good friends who could disagree. I found Pournelle’s politics annoying, but unlike say

@Eric

Ok I’m going to play the innocent here, I read a few of Pournelle’s boks- particularly the collaborations with Larry Niven and Steven Barnes (who is African-American btw)- I never picked up any fascism, nor explicit racism- certainly a distrust of bureaucracy. Could you site a source or reason? As for the salute- The

He and Pournelle repeatedly hit it out of the park in the 1970's and 1980's by taking cliched SF tropes like giant asteroids (Lucifer’s Hammer), alien invasion (Footfall), and first contact (The Mote in God’s Eye)and handling them in a grounded, realistic, detailed, modern, way.

I’ve mentioned my love of his collaborations with Larry Niven on another list. I think that Lucifer’s Hammer was among the first science fiction novels I read. It was a great introduction to the genre.

It sounds suspiciously like that cult that jewish rabble rouser started a couple thousand years ago.

A sad day for all citizens of the CoDominium.

I posted this last night, but I choose to remember him this way; at a con and having fun with his friends.

I think it’s because it came from an ‘honest’ place.

Evan, this was great. It takes losing someone to realize exactly how much he changed the medium you love; I read so many Len Wein books and basically didn’t realize it. Terrible loss all around