aphantomlimb
aphantomlimb
aphantomlimb

Oh, good. I was worried I was overstating his awfulness.

I know it seems hyperbolic, but I'm asking seriously:

… Nope.

Funny, my initial reaction was also to tell you to go fuck yourself. But I kept that sentiment to myself despite you going out of your way to suggest I was somehow less than human. But you've now proven that I clearly should have stuck with that first impulse, O Master of the English Language.

Well, you must be human, because it's clear that your reading comprehension is shit. I said that it would have worked better if they'd allowed *both* of them to have relatable motives for their actions.

They didn't really show that effectively at all, though. She comes across in that moment much more like she's simply disgusted that someone like Eugene would dare try to kiss her. She's a total caricature, when both the tragedy and the bleak humor of the situation would almost certainly have worked better if they'd

It reminds me a lot of the A.I. situation. So many people assumed that all of that film's darker, more intellectual elements must have come from Kubrick's work, and they just as readily assumed that the more saccharine, fairy tale elements could only have been Spielberg's handiwork. However, that assessment is almost

For those who don't know, the story of the balloon and the two Laura Buxtons is absolutely true.

Okay.

Not well enough for him, apparently.

That wasn't all. Do you remember what was written on the picture frame?

Based on Mr. Handlen's review history, I'm not entirely sure he genuinely likes much of anything. Rick and Morty, maybe?

Reproductions of this story were included in a charity postcard book called What's Your Story? In addition to Rowling, it has pieces from Tom Stoppard, Margaret Atwood, Neil Gaiman, Doris Lessing, Nick Hornby, Irvine Welsh, and a bunch of others. I recommend checking it out, though there aren't all that many copies

Well then. I've been checking throughout the day, both on demand and on the app, and it had not shown up yet. But you are quite correct, it's now available on the app. (But not on demand so far.) Thank you for the heads-up!

Not if you want to watch it legally and CN doesn't recognize your service provider. It wasn't a problem for this bomb because Time Warner Spectrum made them available on demand and through their own app, but that isn't the case with the next episode (at least not yet).

Yeah, Ophelia snapped his neck.

Well, we also see him defy physics by floating over the gumballs while carrying Connie.

I… really liked the "ass" moment? It felt sweet to me and, more importantly, quite natural. It didn't strike me as belabored at all. Though, yes, it was obvious that Mack's line about living in a world "without Hope" was going to come at some point from the first moment we knew he had his daughter in the Framework.

A great episode all around, but I especially appreciate that, unlike in the comics currently, this show is fully committed to the premise that yes, Hydra is all Nazis. No equivocation here!

Honestly, I'm a bit surprised that this episode is being received quite as warmly as it is. And the problem isn't the length of the final "battle," though giving the two of them a few more minutes to speak to each other would have been greatly appreciated. The characters certainly earned that much. But the real