Particularly in their politics.
Particularly in their politics.
The great thing about levelling via dungeons is that the early dungeons are essentially training wheel stuff for how to play your class (and in my experience people only care about the healer if you let anyone die. I've had some bad experiences with overzealous tanks, but mostly it's fine.)
Priests used to be terrible for solo play but with Dungeon Finder where healers are always in demans to the point you can just level that way (and actually giving holy priests a second low-level attack) I'd say they're easier now than the days where if you weren't levelling shadow spec don't bother levelling.
If the original King James, Oxford did a great annotated release of that. Want to retain the cadence of the language but with a more accurate translation, I recommend the New Revised Standard Version.
Touche about films. I could have done without Elysium.
Not very convincing words, though.
Go to more film festivals. This year I attended various films in IFI's Horrorthon, all the films in their Kinofest (German films), but just managed to see one from the French (the really obvious one) and Lithuanian (Vanishing Waves, which is a great sci-fi film.)
I can agree with the second two of those (I'm really just waiting on getting more reliable internet as far as returning to Warcraft goes, and owning Philip K. Dick's Exegesis sure looks impressive on a coffee table but opening it up is another matter.)
So PBS's whole lineup then?
Downton's always been a kind of trashy warm Sunda entertainment for old people and Tories, though. I feel like one of the show's more persistent problems is the amount of people who read it as anything other than the above.
It's just embarrassingly stupid. It lays on the Tragic Irony a little thick with a counterpoint to an opera singer and a wistful Mr. Bates actually saying out loud he wonders what his wife is doing right now.
Rick and Morty is clearly the superhero law firm advertisement in this analogy. Or something.
Well besides his falling out in his interviews before he left he made it clear he didn't particularly like working on a sitcom or the scheduling that involves. I just don't think he cares for this line of work.
They did, the Professor of the Nicholas Cage class recognizes Abed as the student who broke the Who's The Boss Professor.
Especially the superhero origin episode.
This too. The biggest problem with Shirley is that the things that matter most to her, person-wise (her children and her husband) are extremely peripheral to the show. Writing them off, however temporarily, is at least a solution.
So long as you swear never to utter a kind word about season four, under penalty of rewatching season four.
Todd's not the Archer reviewer…
…anymore…
It's your standard contrived sitcom device to maintain the status quo, but with the dark undercurrent that the status quo is maintained through these people all being miserable failures, but getting to be miserable failures together.
Psychology.