anion--disqus
Anion
anion--disqus

Oooh, ouch! :-)

Men are always thinking about sex, amirite? LAWL!!

They're going to live on a farm. It's the same one Batman's parents live on now.

Seconding The Flash, btw. I can't recall a new show we've—as in my family—all enjoyed so much (aside from Brooklyn Nine-Nine, but that's a comedy). Tons of fun, but with enough serious moments to keep it from turning into a kiddie show.

My family and I cannot figure out how or why Agent Carter's second season took such a lousy turn, when we enjoyed the first season so much. We've got three or four episodes sitting on the DVR that we haven't even mentioned watching, and last year it was on our must-watch list.

Totally OT, and I doubt this is the case but I have to ask: Did your username come from Monster High's Operetta?

It's worth it just for Jeffrey Dean Morgan's Comedian, IMO. (But in my mind anything is worth watching for JDM, so…)

I loved the first 3/4 or so of it, but hated the ending.

Watchmen was excellent for about the first 3/4; it just crashed and burned horribly with the denouement, which deviated so badly from the comic and seemed unnecessarily dark and pessimistic. (Yes, I realize the whole thing was downbeat and pessimistic, but sheesh.)

UK Netflix has endless rows of those, too.

Meanwhile, the new films UK Netflix gets will be titles like Gigli and a bunch of straight-to-video crap not even good enough to be on the Lifetime Network!

Different tastes, I guess, or yeah, overexposure. I've always thought it was probably most interesting to those who remember it, and not so much to those who don't, so your experience is the exact opposite.

Years ago, I read a long series of articles about this case in MRR, that discussed Fuhrman's connection with some white-supremacy group—the group responsible for or involved with the murder of radio shock-jock Alan Berg. It's been a long time since I read it so the details are quite fuzzy, but it made a very

"I am convinced that the LAPD were trying to frame a guilty man and it blew up in their faces."

I guess some people find vicious misogyny hilarious.

Not disagreeing with you, but that's why it's called "jury DUTY," instead of "jury funtime."

It's hip to denigrate Schwimmer, though, regardless of how undeserved it is and always has been. If he brought a packed crowd at a stadium to tears with his performance of Hamlet, reviewers would still call him a talentless boob after they dried their eyes.

Huh. I lived through it—it was the year I turned twenty-one—and I'm finding it pretty riveting.

I've only seen one or two episodes—I'm DVRing to watch the whole thing at once—but what I've seen has been tremendous. I can't wait to see the rest, and plan to have my kids watch, too.

I totally agree with you there. Foggy's supposed to be a good lawyer, and any halfway decent lawyer (or any person with more than half a brain) should be able to come up with a better off-the-cuff excuse than that. Especially when, as you said, you're trying to find a reason why a blind guy might have bruised himself