The oft-maligned 1990s version of The Joy of Cooking.
The oft-maligned 1990s version of The Joy of Cooking.
I can't wait to see the episode where they lampoon this insanely deadly serious article about a cartoon show that features fart jokes. You dumbasses.
The state's interest in ensuring that child rape is punished.
Not really her decision. This is a major felony that the state has a legitimate public interest in pursuing, and it doesnt stop because of what the victim says, never mind why she is saying it.
Dude, I know my tags. It was morning. I was cranky
*snip*.
As a reader of the books, I've just shut that part down and enjoyed where the TV version goes. (I tend to forget book plots after I've read them, and the Expanse series is, frankly, just average space opera at best and not that memorable.)
For an article that gives serious grief to white guy music, the writing is really, really white. It's like I'm reading Spin magazine circa 1986. You should read it with Erica's Word playing in the background.
You trust sushi in Uganda?
I started to smile when I realized the episode was a classic stern chase. Gripping.
The Expanse is at its heart New Space Opera, a la Reynolds, Hamilton, Asher, Banks. Same romances as the stories in the early pulps, but with nanotech and computers and all the rest.
This article has a certain thickness about it that I find appealing
That's a sad and odd combo of medications.
Hey, we're all crazy in some way.
The key to a good burger is not toppings, but an 80/20 chuck burger not slapped, but babied on an outdoor grill to preserve the juices, salted and peppered and cooked medium. Eat immediately. That is all.
Troll, and "racist," too. An accusation of racism is very serious and yet people these days toss it at others like they would an eye roll or like British people say cunt.
The entire show is an ongoing joke about rich privileged upper middle class white people!
This has to be the only cartoon ever to reference Lysistrata.
Mary Elizabeth Winstead. Charisma. So pretty. Those eyes.
I hope Kristin Bell's character never learns or changes or becomes a good person because she sees the error of her ways.