Io9: Where we put the Cynicism Before The Horse!*
Io9: Where we put the Cynicism Before The Horse!*
"I vividly remember facing off against Vince Carter in college, truly epic games."
How about welcoming their smartest science and engineering students into the US, so that they can choose to work in the U.S. if they like? Not all Iranians are the same, and not all of them support what their country is doing — you know that, right? Just like not all people in the United States voted for our current…
I'm really glad I like my parents.
This is great Jalopnik.
YOU'RE ON CNN! THE SHOW THAT LEADS INTO MINE IS PUPPETS MAKING CRANK PHONE CALLS! WHAT IS WRONG WITH YOU????
Unless you call it "Retina Display".
This was the worst, most self-indulgent and needlessly rambling episode since Season 2. I get that TWD is all about 'death comes to everyone, eventually', but Tyreese's demise was unforgivably undignified simply because it was decorated with the pointless, pretentious tinsel of all those hallucinations.
Maybe Paul's just airing out the new dye-job?
Jon Wurster with the most happy to be there smile I have ever seen.
Then you never watched a lot of Letterman.
Pretty sure X played Letterman long, long ago. He has a pretty good record of having good musical acts. Well, at least, I have found in my searching that he had, in the last 30 years, had good groups (my opinion) featured.
I'm on to you, Johnny Depp!
"Please."
This sounds a bit like a Boston fan trying to make it seem more like a Pats win than a Seahawks loss
tell us what you know of this Red Dot.
Uncensored version or it didn't happen.
In some circles, samurai represented extreme classism and were well manicured, eloquent brutes. The great film director, Akira Kurosawa, frequently highlighted the disparities and inequality of the peasant and samurai classes, deconstructing some of the romanticism of the feudal system and samurai class.
I'm fascinated by the culture and samurai system myself, but the more I read about the subject, the more it feels like it's just barbarism in a tuxedo. The code of honor was just window dressing rationale for barbaric behavior that was similar to what was going on everywhere else in the world.