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Anthony J. Rand
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No worries, sorry if I was an ass, too.

Be nice if they got payed for it, though. Every time I see Don Rosa at a con he has a sign on his booth saying "I did not create Duck Tales." I don't know for sure, but I imagine he and Barks probably got screwed out of royalties, as most creators have throughout comics history.

That's a fair point about the show wanting to have its cake and eat it too, and I was out of line dissing people who don't like the ending, I apologize. I still like it, though, I think it worked better than the two seasons leading up to it.

My friends loved it, I personally thought it looked weird. But, as one person pointed out, CGI will never get better if they don't keep experimenting with it, so fair enough.

Death is always pointless. It's a war movie.

My thoughts as well. This wasn't a character movie, all the characters got a little intro so we knew who they were and that's all we needed to care about them.

I would have been disappointed if any one of them escaped. It had to feel like a real, meaningful sacrifice.

So, either the song tells you that mom is cheating on dad… or the song tells you that Santa Claus isn't real. I guess it's traumatizing either way.

Here, here! "How I Met Your Dad" sounds clunky and like it's trying too hard and yet not hard enough to be different.

I was actually really glad when we found out Barney and Robin were divorced, because it validated an entire season of me saying "Jesus, Barney is being such an asshole. Is this supposed to be romantic? They would totally get divorced if he were this bad in real life." I thought it was just bad writing, but then it

As a millennial creeping up on 30, I can say that is sadly true.

I don't mean with Robin, I mean with the Mother. Over the last episode we learn they didn't jump into a marriage, they dated and even had kids for a long while before they got married. It seemed like Ted had finally become more realistic about relationships, forming a strong one with someone he loved over time,

I love the finale. Ted finally learns his lesson that real relationships are messy and complicated and end in divorce or death, that there is no romanticized notion of "The One." Many people in the audience did not learn that lesson, it seems.

See, I specifically remember "Grift of the Magi" being my first sign that the show was going downhill as a kid. I love "Hungry Hungry Homer" though.

Yes, they're a very Christian company, which just adds to their popularity in the South. They aren't even open on Sundays. Like similarly Christian Hobby Lobby, they have a good reputation for being equitable to their employees, but have a bad reputation for homophobia. They're also one of the better quality fast

It was related. They were dressing as cows to get free chicken sandwiches at Chik-Fil-A.

Yeah, my northern friends didn't get that joke either, but I'm from Georgia and it really tickled me.

I hadn't seen it since I was a kid until about a year ago when I started catching it in reruns. Criminally underrated show, there's still nothing on TV today quite like it (maybe because besides The Middle and Bob's Burgers, television seems to have completely forgotten there are people in this country who aren't

He was on Mascots, so it's safe to assume he's still talking to Guest.

Yeah, I was surprised to see Ellen Wong still playing a teenager six years after Scott Pilgrim. That movie came out my third year of college and she's older than I am. Granted, she is petite enough that it's a bit believable but I'm sure she'd rather be playing adult characters than a teenager's love interest.