adamwhitehead01
Werthead
adamwhitehead01

100%, it was never promoted, it wasn’t given a chance, I only knew it was happening b/c of this website, and I loved it; I love most Brian K Vaughn things; The Y: adaptation was atrocious, but I liked Paper Girls. Finally, a role for Jason Mantsoukas that wasn’t just Rafi with a different name! All of this inevitably

Amazon has canceled Paper Girls after one season.

Empire? What is this 1947? 

Every game was any% at minimum with like anything in life the option to go for 100% if chosen. AceGamerSam did finish mario 64 as his last 100% as a closing event.

As for your other questions we typically get these kinda questions. Sports games are either winning a tournament/playoff mode, or winning a season if that

The map is especially odd, because later in the scene they say “Middle-earth was left in ruins” and they show a bunch of stuff under water. The actor that plays Arondir also says that he’s from Beleriand.

I know I should rise above, but just what?

Year of the Rabbit is a real, if short lived gem.

“I probably don’t need the script, it’s just a word.”

I sincerely hope that in five to ten years everyone pronounces it New York Citaaayyyy and there’s not a damn thing NYC residents can do about it.

This has nothing to do with What We Do In The Shadows. His entire career is an excuse to give the absolute strangest line readings. I’m so curious how or why he decides to deliberately fuck up phrases and words. It’s interesting that he doesn’t seem to do it at all with his music. So is he taking the piss? Just trying

Now playing

Matt Berry can find the comic potential in a single 3-letter word.

Every show this man is in is full of these gems. Matt Berry is a dialogue assassin.

That was an amazing moment. Truly a great game.

Now playing

Noclip made a fantastic documentary about the making of Prey, and they talk about the way the decision was handed down by Bethesda. Basically, Bethesda gave Arkane full creative control over the game and the only thing they would not budge on was the name. So they did it. It’s a pretty great documentary, and I thought

HotD will dominate the conversation at least until the novelty of saying “Hot D” wears off.

If he were a huge name commanding a huge salary he would not be second-billed behind Paddy Considine.

It’s really surprising how much this “but everyone married as kids” trope is trotted out as historical fact. In the few cases where two kids of similar ages DID get married, it usually didn't work out so well until they were older or until one of them died (ex: Louis Auguste/ Marie Antoinette, Francis/ Mary of Scots).

So what?

I’d love to see an actually realistic medieval- or medieval-style show demonstrating not just the pain of living in that era, but also some of the resourcefulness, humanity and common sense. (Anyone have any recommendations?)

Look, I love Matt Smith. I think he’s great and puts all his energy into any role he’s given. Matt Smith is not above HBO since the last thing he did was... *checks notes* Morbius.