anion--disqus
Anion
anion--disqus

Read actual literature? Don't be silly. Everyone knows that until about eight years ago, females in literature—especially young females—were nothing but silent, simpering decorations. Just like every other form of media up until then.

Yes, I saw this headline and thought, "Is there any shitty musician whose opinion I care about less than Neil Young's?"

Yeah, it's not that I want to see Caitlin (or any character) tortured, but I agree it's hard to feel a PTSD plotline when, although she was tied up, all we saw her captor do to her was be nice and bring her hamburgers. Jay never seemed like he was actually threatening Caitlin or would genuinely hurt her; even when he

You didn't miss anything. The "They were gay lovers!" theory here is just po-mo bullshit invented by a giggling twelve-year-old who thinks "They were gay lovers!" makes them look clever and subversive, that being gay is a choice, and that men feel no emotion for people they don't want to fuck.

So sexual orientation isn't something people are born with, but is like an item of clothing they can put on or take off at will? If I'm having trouble with men, I can just "try dating ladies," because I can choose to be gay?

The Whitle Walkers: They stroll around carving stuff from sticks and raising hell.

Bran the Builder! Can he fix it?
Bran the Builder! YES HE CAN!

I hated Matt Smith's run on Who (which was Steven Moffat's fault, not Smith's specifically) so stopped watching after his first season. So yeah, we watch Arrowverse in our house but not Who anymore, really—we checked in occasionally but every time we did it was more crap.

Well, considering that her son, fifty-odd years later, saw his long-dead parents standing before him young and healthy, and his response was kind of like, "Oh, hey, cool, nice to see you," and not the outburst of emotion anyone else in that situation would feel…maybe they figure he's kind of a sociopath, and decide to

I wondered that, too. Uh, Ray…you know, you're a young man, you've got plenty of years left in which to father children. Shouldn't you be looking at this as, "Wow! We succeed, and I live to go back to my own time and find a nice lady to have babies with!" instead of "Damn, which chick did I knock up and accidentally

I had to laugh at the "There's no crime now!" line, when we just watched a crime happening in the first few minutes of the show.

Oh, the stupid, yes. Like the fact that they have an exact date and time where Savage will be—the moment they kill him on Arrow—and could go back there, watch themselves kill him, and then watch to see what happens and how he comes back.

HA!

I think it's planned from the start. That whole scene, and the meaning of Hodor's name being revealed through it, seems to me like one of the things I think of as "set-pieces," that I usually have in place before I write a word.

Hey, at least in this one he didn't jump all over the place, use meaningless sentence fragments, or talk about social justice issues.

Jeez, sign me up, then!

It is a truth universally acknowledged that a queen of good fortune must be in want of a husband…

They'll put his mind in Kathleen Turner's body.

Not a coward or a pacifist. An innocent.

You should offer yourself to him.