Wasn't Jon Snow actually the first character to kill a White Walker, back in "The Pointy End"?
Wasn't Jon Snow actually the first character to kill a White Walker, back in "The Pointy End"?
The problem for me is that it seems to define "public intellectual" as someone willing to pontificate about subjects in which he or she has no real expertise or insight (e.g. Norman Mailer). I'd much rather have multiple voices discussing subjects that they know something about rather than a few gasbags who have an…
I genuinely liked the original Brother Blood character in the 80s Teen Titans comics. He was one of the first super villains who actually used public relations as a weapon, and he was surprisingly good at it for someone whose hat was made out of a skull.
You might say he won the runoff
We did laugh over the bit where Detective Lance comes to see Oliver and says it's about "my daughter . . . Laurel." There's dramatic irony because Sara is in the next room, but I don't think anyone would actually feel the need to clarify that he's not coming over to talk about the daughter who's been dead for five…
You see the same sort of silliness in X-Men ( I think they even use the same term, Homo superior). The implicit view of how species evolve (i.e., clusters of individuals suddenly appearing with a whole suite of new traits) is so cartoonishly wrong it makes the young-earth creationists look sensible by comparison.
I do think calling the guy who's able to kill people "Killian" is a bit on the nose. I guess calling him "Homer Cidal" would have been deemed excessive.
They've definitely embraced the Arrow Shirtless Training Session Imperative.
I love how the hot idealist hacker was willing to sell out for one million dollars. If he's really the supergenius he is portrayed to be, he would have much, much easier and safer ways to make a million bucks if that's what he wanted.
My point is that nobody in the corporate world thinks of a CEO's executive assistant as a glorified secretary. The official title for the senior White House staff is "special assistant to the President," and nobody thinks they are fetching coffee.
The problem isn't that it's irrational, it's that it's irrational in a way that's out of character for Laurel. She is fair-minded to a fault - she forgave Oliver for her sister's death, although he was much more directly culpable there. Her reaction seems contrived for the purpose of creating conflict rather than…
The season is off to a really strong start, but they are going to have to work on plausibility and motivation. Even by comic-book standards, some of the plot holes are too much. Shutdown or no, I don't think the federal government would let four of its employees be murdered without so much as sending a US Marshal…
In his own bed, with a bellyful of wine and a girl's mouth around his cock yo
Beautiful day out there. Perfect cane weather.
I love both characters, but I have never bought them as a couple.
Her character's name is Phyllis, but Crawford calls her Bella, as does Hannibal
Peggy's pitch didn't sell in the room; a pitch from a third, bigger agency sold in the room, which is why Ted was complaining about having to fight for scraps.
Yes that look was more Needless than Needles
Yes it was like Honey learned drag at a montessori school. The look isn't everything, but it matters - that's why no one does drag on the radio.
Even before they showed "I Remember You," I was thinking about the overlap - Ice King is able to form these genuine emotional connections (with Marceline and NEPTR) but the crazy always kicks in, causing him to forget the connection and become sad and lonely again