Just like the Olympics.
Just like the Olympics.
"Nobody's perfect."
How much harder was it to catch up? What with the whole chaos.
I didn't hate it for cool points, myself. I'm sure many people can say the same. And yes, mythology/religion and sci-fi are totally compatible, or people would hate Battlestar Galactica far before the end because of it.
Ah, freak deer!
Oh yeah, I didn't mean it as a negative… the Red Lotus kind of needed to have these extra harrowing villain moment, to go with how reasonable they sounded most of the time.
I did mean the Earth Queen getting the air pulled out of her until she die- until she was… taken down.
You must be thinking of that time a character was murdered graphically and at lenghts on screen in Legends of Korra and the event was referred to that character being "taken down" thereafter.
Does a bear shit in the wools?
Well, the physics of his weapon were already fairly suspect, so that seemed extra fitting!
Oh, "us," I see. I get why you'd go for such a "not as good an analogy" as this. And then persist and sort of try to imply that you'd be victimized somehow if such an hypothetical were to come true, and then someone would have the gall to mention the (barely acknowledged) ongoing terror campaign (that happens to…
More like Noah Gross, am I right?
"Might be angry by this paragraph even."
I'm angry at it. There's not a single part of it that does not make me angry.
I hated the dumb lightning strike.
That's why people need a license to own amphibious rodents.
I didn't recognize its description on What's On Tonight? but as it turns out, Shattered is the first episode of Battlestar Galactica I have ever watched. Which means that a series of reviews starting at that point is perfect for me! At the time I remember getting everything I needed to know for the Galactica…
If you don't shoot a beaver, it's gonna come for you.
The ghost Olmos character was calling the shots with Colin Hanks dragging his feet, I'm pretty sure. Until the narrative shift where he disappeared forever, Colin Hanks was declared pure evil and motivated by sadism after all. Which might not help your memory of how relevant that was, because in the end, it wasn't.
I think he was. I mean he represents everything 'serial killer' about Colin Hanks' character, up until the switch the narrative to protect the integrity of the Dexter brand.
It was not the old man who vexed you, but his Evil Eye?