avclub-2654adfd65b6ca4a8ac25a9f727d2262--disqus
atomicfun
avclub-2654adfd65b6ca4a8ac25a9f727d2262--disqus

In space!

@avclub-1c94d7ee62364576f2f61996170fe903:disqus It was enough.

Well, after the end of book 3 really. When experts tell newbies that there's still plenty more compelling stuff even next episode and next season, they're not kidding.

Seemed like he was going to get some air amongst the men as well.

And that is some fucking dramatic irony at its very best.

When they come back there's less and less of you. There's a theory that when you die and are brought back by the Lord of Light, your reanimated corpse (and brain) focus intently on the last thing you were doing. Beric Dondarrion was following Ned Starks orders, Catelyn was wishing hell upon the Freys and Lannisters.

@avclub-9b7b0109c992b2904b1cb4640cebc223:disqus  Hence society's abortion debate.

@avclub-5e550d516b252b5d3e9a239590372fed:disqus Indeed, as Todd writes, film is a better than books in the way that it can drive home the shock of a particular emotion. No one watching is going to forget this, and I have an inkling that we aren't going to need "Where do whores go?" repeated endlessly to let us know

It was definitely the writers fucking with the book readers. Her death at the wedding makes all her scenes retroactively more tragic.

I was watching it with my girlfriend, who hasn't read the 3rd book, laying her head on my chest (we were watching in bed), and the when the wedding scene started she looks at me and says "Your heart is racing so fast!"

@Juan_Carlo:disqus As a book reader, that's what I told everyone I knew who hadn't read the books: This season, just watch the show. Stay the fuck off the internet.

There was lots of intelligence in his statement. He thought about it for a long time, had discussions about it with his friends, and was able to determine which music he just can't stand. And he can't stand it for a very simple reason. The timbre doesn't agree with him. Hell half the article is just Scott Ian

Well don't listen to Jason Heller. Start with Welcome to Sky Valley and a whole lot of weed.

It's kind of interesting that most of the Hatesongs aren't like this one. "Well I thought pretty hard about it, and this is just the music that agrees with me the least."

You will always be the enemy.

It's 1968, he's becoming more radical. It can become very easy in times like that to divide the people you know into allies and enemies.

UMD covered a lot of my thoughts below (and in a much more eloquent way, because he's great). But as I say to Mat Steele below, the influence was more insidious than just the slapdick copycats and influence for shitty subgenres, but they completely changed the industry, paved the road for the rise of nu metal, and

It's not elitism, it's just an opinion. Pantera did what they did well (sort of, considering how they refused to talk about their 80s material), but what I really meant was how they affected the industry. Lowest common denominator groove has been consistently rewarded since Far Beyond Driven debuted at #1 on the

A very significant amount of the metal fanbase began to focus almost exclusively on groove. And not in a funk rock kind of way. Along with Suffocation, Pantera were massively influential in the rise of not only brutal death metal, but basically every deathcore band today, along with bands like Lamb of God.

This song rules, but Pantera were a HUGE overall negative for metal music.