Cootie food!
Cootie food!
I see no problem with reading Pynchon's novels in chronological order. V. gives you the works while still being pretty accessible, so you might as well just work your way forward from there.
Maybe I'm going insane.
When I saw this, I thought it was by far Miyazaki's worst—not necessarily BAD, per se, but really unfocused and vague and just not that interesting. And yet, all the reviews seem to think it's super-great. I suppose I could watch it again, but it sure never took multiple viewing in the past…
You might THINK it's just a goofy game. Little did you know that it's ACTUALLY "designed to create a new generation of fat-hating, heteronormative assholes." You think I'm joking? Ha! Ha! HA HA HA! You naive fool!
I'm sort of agnostic on that question, but the ludicrously over-the-top responses from certain feminist blogs had me rolling my eyes. I call myself a radical feminist because in this environment it seems like the only morally justifiable option, but sometimes it's hard.
A new Russo novel?
Why was I not informed? In any case: sweetness.
Hey, no problem. I'm glad my hard work as a cobbler is paying off
Okay, so maybe my comment wasn't clear. "Capcom would no doubt like you to *believe* that a few of these never existed" wasn't referring back to "goofy Street Fighter/Superhero crossovers;" it was referring to earlier items in the list, like SF: The Game: The Movie: and SF EX. In retrospect I can see that that was…
Geez.
Audiences didn't care what critics thought about Transformers 2, so we're not showing advancing screenings of GI Joe so that the critics whom audiences don't care about don't have an adverse effect on the audience. Yes. That seems logical.
Hey, I have nothing against those games; I just think you could argue that they aren't exactly canonical. If there is such a thing as 'canon' in this case.
Street Fighter IV=thirteenth Street Fighter?
Now granted, I'm not a huge Street Fighter fan, so I'm probably missing more than a few, but at the very LEAST, you have…
adsfsdf
I loved Blur more'n anything back in the day. The Great Escape was my favorite thing ever, and Parklife and MLIR weren't far behind. Then the self-titled album came out. WTF? thought I. I actually liked about half the songs (not including "Song 2," due to my not being a drunken fratboy, alas), but it…
The double post is an elliptical comment on the cyclical nature of pack-in game quality! Yeah—that's the stuff.
"Best freebie pack-in game in 20 years?"
Really? You're putting Altered Beast above Wii Sports? Not that I necessarily object; I like Altered Beast no matter what anyone says, darn it. But it still seems like a surprising assertion. Or did 1989 see some other totally sweet pack-in that I'm not remembering?
"Best freebie pack-in game in 20 years?"
Really? You're putting Altered Beast above Wii Sports? Not that I necessarily object; I like Altered Beast no matter what anyone says, darn it. But it still seems like a surprising assertion. Or did 1989 see some other totally sweet pack-in that I'm not remembering?
Forget Get Your War On…
…Adventures of Confessions of Saint Augustine Bear is where it's at.
I assumed this was actually *news.*
As a paid-up member of the Pynchon cult, I've been familiar with this cover for a long time. I'm even familiar with the previous version with a different font. The lameness of this post is great.
It's all been downhill for Kilmer since Top Secret, alas.
Well, to be precise, I wanna move the town to the clash city rockers; you need a little drop of electrical SHOCKERS!
I AM SHOCKED…
…THAT A BAD ANIME MOVIE DID NOT BECOME A GOOD LIVE ACTION MOVIE! SHOCKED!