*sigh* The air is there to cushion the chips during shipping in an attempt to maximize the chip to crumb ratio. Chips are packed by weight, not by volume. You aren't getting screwed here.
*sigh* The air is there to cushion the chips during shipping in an attempt to maximize the chip to crumb ratio. Chips are packed by weight, not by volume. You aren't getting screwed here.
Just as high as you and Mr. Flasky want it to be, amigo.
I despise Trump, and am happy to see him get verbally slapped around in any public forum that makes him whine like the absurd little man child that he is….
Alex McCown-Levy. It was an episode of My Wife and Kids starring Damon Wayans. I've only seen 5 minutes of that show in my life, and it was the eggs with paprika scene you describe. Weird.
All I want to know is whether or not Wallace Shawn had dinner with him while shooting The Princess Bride and whether or not anyone made the obvious glib remark.
Please tell me you don't think Stephen King wrote The Man in the High Castle. Because there's a very good reason why it didn't feel particularly close to his sensibilities. Of course, it also didn't feel particularly in tune with Philip K. Dick's sensibilities either, but that's at least a more relevant comparison.
Still trying to get on board with this album a few listens in. I enjoy The Ministry of Social Affairs a lot, and The Wheel is solid. I think all the male backing vocals are making the songs sound a bit cluttered, and it's not lyrically connecting with me either.
Since I tend to hear remake rumours every few years, let's get this straight. Ruth Gordon as Maude in Harold and Maude is a definitive, un-fuck-withable performance.
Wow. I know a few devout Superman fanboys would seriously lose their fucking minds if that scene was included. I mean, you're basically looking at turning Superman into Rorschach there. Which, I would kind of be okay with, but that is mainly because I am a terrible terrible human being.
While I agree that he was ultimately the villain in "Frank" I don't think I would call him an irredeemable serial killer. He just made the music shit.
I thought the commentariat had agreed that "Masturbawling" was the proper term.
Sorority Babes at the Slimeball Bowl-A-Rama directed by Wes Anderson
Anton Chekhov just called. He wanted to point out that there is now an unsecured firearm in the house with a severely depressed character whose boyfriend is on the brink of cheating on her.
While I agree the show was huffing its own fumes a bit here, I have to disagree with your take on Lexi's little monologue. I took it as every bit the cry for help that Rob's desperate babbling at Gretchen was. The difference was that Rob was trying to validate his yearning for the past and Lexi wanted validation for…
Yeah, I'm sure the comments are already filled with people listing ways in which Banner and the Hulk could and (I assume in spite of my comics canon illiteracy) have met face to face.
The other great thing about this show is that the plot is not at all forced. Anyone who has known and loved someone with clinical depression had probably diagnosed Gretchen in the back of their mind ages ago. Of course, everyone in this show is clinical in one way or another, but Gretchen's break is so perfectly in…
Right there with you. Cash's performance was so perfect that it gave me flashbacks to having the same conversation with girlfriends and close friends. And Geere's reaction was spot on. I've been in his situation a few times and he nailed it in a fleeting non-verbal reaction.
Ah you beat me to it. I should probably read the comments more.
Are we now using "Reboot" for any remake? My understanding was that "Reboot" was reserved for series of movies that had experienced severely diminishing returns on recent sequels and needed to be shut down and restarted (hence Reboot) in order to keep the sweet gravy train of a recognizable brand rolling.
Mostly mediocre, occasionally tedious, but I do find her disenchanted sex android delivery on "Falling Down" to be incredibly charming.