Weirdly, I think the funniest Daffy Duck is in "Daffy Doodles." Yet McKimson was the least funny of the Termite Terrace directors.
Weirdly, I think the funniest Daffy Duck is in "Daffy Doodles." Yet McKimson was the least funny of the Termite Terrace directors.
I'm guessing "bold" means they do something about Ivanhoe and Rebecca.
This season is showing the character's growth, caused by his relationship with Amy and by the changes in his friends.
His long survival in the face of diabetes shows his fortitude.
There are two ways one writes a character development. One is, "Well, she's a take-charge kinda character, and she might do such-and-such." The other is, "I suddenly saw her doing this." I'd like to ask the writers which method they chose with Garnet.
I was saying that the Christmas episode didn't have much of a real conflict. Neither did this episode, which was much stronger. The apparent crash between Sheldon/Leonard and General Relativity never happened. The only "problem," as such, in the other story was the ongoing Amy/Sheldon relationship, which was not…
Two of the better episodes were about reading; the card/letter from Howard's father and this one.
All of this week's movies have violent psychopaths. Okay, okay, violence adds drama. But in this case it reinforces a stereotype.
Silly question: is Michelle MacLaren the daughter of Norman McLaren?
Better Neimodians than Nematodes.
If I were to support "Bela's" argument (there are also plausible entries for its opposition), I would say that the uses which are universally socially approved were not the immediate uses. The first thing printed was the Bible and theological argument (which many people approve, and some others don't); then astrology…
And there were counterfeiters — from faux Charlie Chaplins (direction as well as acting) through look-alike cartoons to nearly every "documentary" of that era. The distribution wasn't even standardized: strips of film would be taken off or added on in many towns, depending upon the views of the local projectionist.
I wish this sentiment, which can be valid, was not made with such poor writing. If this post is not a shill, it is phrased like one.
One of the few things I liked in the old _National Lampoon_ was a rhymed satire, a trial of McKuen by the Muses.
Except that the voices which are most readily heard are the ones with money. This is a film made by a Hollywood studio which has its own methods of distribution. It will probably be seen in many major cities. In contrast, it's still hard for me to know how good "Bamboozled" was on the big screen.
Also Dracula.
Marmite? Yes, but the little girl in _Mistress Masham's Repose_ has eyes that color.
My handwriting was and is terrible. I also had as much trouble building a sentence as I would have mortaring and layering a brick wall.
This is particularly great for individuals with Learning Disabilities. My LD kept me from writing any more than a sentence through high school. Computers helped me.
I prefer the vids that don't try to be jokes, like the one "about the bear." I also like the thoughtful videos, like the for-profit online college, and the one about living forever as you are.