avclub-10efc37459572ba5de3036fdb68fda87--disqus
dennis frood
avclub-10efc37459572ba5de3036fdb68fda87--disqus

Well, I don't think Snyder has all that much to do with editing together trailers. That typically falls to a marketing team.

My pissed off jimbrowski turned three colors like Krzysztof Kieślowski.

Or usin his own Trump-pimping as a launching board to grab his own hug.

He may or may not have a legal case here, but from a purely moral standpoint, you've got just as much dirt on your hands if you not only go along with laughing about sexual predation because your boss told you, but also stick around for 10 years after.

Well, it's a number that refers to how many times a thing occurs within a set timeframe. If you picture those occurrences laid out on a graph, they would occur sparsely for lower BPM.

Fuck off.

So many words there, I'm still not entirely clear what your position is.

Let's be honest here: The Art of the Deal is just one long sex scene coded as business advice.

I'd rather dwell on the syntax than the argument, quite frankly. One is just a friendly back-and-forth about language. The other is a descent into the black hole of sexual criminal.

Yeah, but the way he says that he can show her where they have some nice furniture, I'm picturing less Ikea and more "warehouse where faceless minions are unpacking smuggled crates of furniture while the bad guys from Lethal Weapon stroll through discussing their evil plans."

You might also consider that it might not refer to the same derogatory word for women. "Bitchin" is also a term used widely a while back to mean something positive.

Also plausible, for sure. Which you don't really need to hear from me; I'm only commenting so that I can add a whatup for your username.

Fair enough, point conceded there.

I don't think you're running me down at all. That strikes me as a solid line to drawn.

Sure it is. "Scrimping and saving" implies lots of effort with little results, although always in the hopes it will be enough. Hence the necessity of the "but," as contradiction. If it didn't, then you would use the word, "so." "We hardly saved any money, SO it never came close to being enough."

It does often mean "weak," you're right. I'm just saying that 1) it's also used to mean strong and in fact, this sort of usage is common in NY where Trump is from; and 2) if Trump meant it to mean he did something weakly, it would be the first time on record he ever did so, which would be shocking to see in the middle

That IS a contradiction. "We performed actions that hoped to help us achieve our goal," on the one hand. "We did not achieve that goal," on the other.

Maybe. I'm not making any claim about why it's used that way. Just saying that it is.

Fair enough. Those examples do make it hard to see what I mean. How about this: "That hurts like a bitch."

Then he wouldn't have said after, "But I couldn't get anywhere." That's the second half of the statement being in contradiction to the intentions of the first.