Well at least I know that I know nothing. I will now prove this in 10 000 words.
Well at least I know that I know nothing. I will now prove this in 10 000 words.
Come on, someone out there has to know something…
Being over tired these days, I've been watching a lot of Kitchen Nightmares episodes. Gordon Ramsay is very clear on the necessity of labelling everything in the kitchen. I can imagine Batman lecturing other heroes on the absolute necessity of labelling stuff.
Rather than scour the internet for it, maybe they just should give the commentariat the opportunity to contribute one article from time to time, on a subject they know well. It would fill pages, wouldn't cost anything, and keep people happy.
Add lightning to the box filled with vintage cookies, and you could create a new life form.
In French it's BD, short for "bande dessinée", "drawn strips".
Yeah, the only one who stays dead is Mercutio. Romeo actually got sent to the Illyria dimension.
I bet there'll be so called acting but the kiss will be the most convincing moment in it.
So, everyone, what's your favourite Shakespeare play? I'd have to say King Lear (but I also love Julius Caesar) and for the comedies Much ado about nothing.
Same here, if childhood memories count. At home, my parents listened mainly to classical music, with the exception of Tom Waits, the Pogues and Bruce Springsteen.
Hyperreality!
At least he can tell the others that maybe it isn't such a good idea to split up to go down to the cellar and into the forest.
I studied Les Misérables (the book) with middle schoolers. When we came to the place when Jean Valjean steals bread to feed his family the whole class burst out laughing, to my surprise. Apparently they felt that stealing bread made him a loser.
So, to answer your question, no. It just means you're really lame.
I'm asking seriously (and I hope nicely): what is the appeal? I don't understand it. I never could find any. I find it a mixture of sad and boring, which makes me a little ashamed.
Depends on their age.
Ok then. I'll bite. I thought the episode was elevated by the sober way it treated death and by Ezra's reaction, which felt very natural.
The usual example you give to children at school is the following:
"It's time to eat, kids / It's time to eat kids.
Punctuation can save lives. Use it responsibly."
I didn't watch the series entirely, but it seems to me that in it he seemed to be coldly evil, with a will to be so. While in the book, he is sure he is the hero , and does things because of exacerbated emotions and whimsy, and is pretty much amoral.
Soooo… are you realized?
Syfy puts annoying kids in almost every show : Eureka, the Librarians, Warehouse 13… Now it has a show comprised entirely of annoying kids.