aikenrc89
-Eraserhead-Pencildick-
aikenrc89

Wrong again, Miriam Webster is my very intelligent neighbor. She told me her definition over several cups of tea (we each had three). 

Nah. A couple is 2. More than a couple is 3, which is a few.  Several is at least 5.

Even assuming Tarantino works that long, three decades isn’t “several.”  It’s a few.

Is he doing a bad job at it?

Sir, this is a Wendy’s.

aren’t you pleasant?

I was so baffled by Ted Lasso S3. It was...watchable, but so many story threads were just picked up and abandoned almost immediately. Remember Zaza, the best soccer player in the world, joining Richmond and leaving the next episode? The restaurant racism being cleaned up and never mentioned again? The gay subplot that

Ted Lasso was pretty wretched. But I think you'd have a hard time finding anyone who was actively disappointed by Wolf Pack. Seems like that show was pretty clear about what it wanted to be and was.

Not according to the screaming Norwegian at the beginning. 

I watched a few eps and just couldn’t get into it. There’s one very funny comedienne whose voice is...just not for me. Live action, she’s funny. Just for voicework, I can’t watch her scenes.

The rest of the characters just never grabbed me as well. The whole thing felt meh, but I’m glad it’s still on for those who do

I was never under the impression that Burton was all that attached to Batman or the movies he made with Keaton in the role. They made him rich and famous, and basically gave him carte blanche to make whatever he wanted for a decade, but he never seemed that personally invested in the character or his world except as a

Later day Playboy maybe, but it was not hated in the 60s and 70s. It was a legit journalistic publication. Just one that also had naked ladies in it. Just look up who wrote for Playboy then. And the interviews the magazine ran.

Japan is definitely a little bit “weird.” In many great ways, and in some weird ways, but the Japanese come of no weirder than Americans come off in foreign films.

Watched it again last year and it’s still lovely. Does it exoticize Japanese culture? Sure, but it’s through the perspective of two outsiders to whom the environment feels totally foreign. Moreover, it reflects how Bob himself feels about how that culture views him: a kind of exotic commodity, as strange and alluring

I haven’t seen it lately, but I remember liking it a lot and loving the soundtrack. I remember thinking most of the Japanese characters were 2-dimensional but I think that was sort of the point. We’re getting the story from the perspective of the disoriented Americans. I kind of wish Sofia Coppola had made a companion

Ever send a long dense email that hinges on a pivotal attachment that you forgot to actually attach? 

Also not Armageddon/Gone in 60 Seconds Will Patton.

Which are all based on the novel ‘Push’, by Sapphire.

That’s terrible.

Every episode of that show is awful.