avclub-0e9bad917997d6ce7c4f76ff32a8f0b4--disqus
mayonegg
avclub-0e9bad917997d6ce7c4f76ff32a8f0b4--disqus

LSP is clearly — whichever one Geena Davis played.

How dare you! You, you…pamplemousse!

C'mon, it was the highlight of third grade for me.

Thus, perfect username.

Years ago as a tourist in London I was in Hyde Park, listening to nutjobs in Speakers' Corner. This one guy was jabbering on about aliens/Muslims/G.W. Bush/whatever, and he had his own personal heckler. She was about 80 years old, wearing a nightgown, and all she kept telling people was that this guy didn't know

Just finished myself, and I agree.

He, alone of the Stern crew, seems like a normal, stand-up guy. The one who least deserves to have crap yelled at him, yet the one with the most-recognizable nickname.

Do you resist the urge to shout "Baba Booey" at him?

Augusten Burroughs?

CT seems like the default movie setting for where rich people go when they want to stay in the country, probably because every rich person in NYC has a summer house in the western part of the state. Like Katharine Hepburn in "Bringing Up Baby", and she is probably our best export (Hartford native, lived in Saybrook,

I think he gets name-checked as a classmate of a main character. He was already executed before the events of TURN.

There's also evidence of a diagnosis shift — the rate of diagnosis of intellectual disability has actually decreased over the last decade, while the diagnosis of autism has shot up.

The Wakefield paper laid out the mechanism, something to do with bacteria in the gut being altered by the vaccine. It rang true for a lot of parents because kids on the spectrum often have GI issues.

You're not the only one.

"Weaponized apathy" — you nailed it. The screamed "I don't care!" was the biggest laugh of the episode for me.

Michael York.

The sulky clean-up! The only other human being I've ever seen do that is my six-year-old.

Fan service is exactly what it is. A little of that is fine, but you have to know when to bow out, and DG just does not.

Eh, the later books (I'm working my way through the newest one now) are just badly in need of editing. The series is so popular it's as though no one's willing to tell Gabaldon, "Hey, having three chapters in a row that are entirely a person's inner thoughts as they wander lost in a forest might be slightly boring for

My two sets of grandparents had 12 and 19, respectively.