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Wooly Shambler
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I think a few years have passed since that robbery. I interpreted it as being the initial arrest that cost her her future as a track star, and that things have gone downhill since.

I think most of it's money was expected to be made overseas though, which is what it's doing.

Also, Hannibal and New Girl

There's way too much baggage in that relationship for it to be healthy now — ideally, they'd work on just being friends first. TV drama-wise though, I wouldn't necessarily mind it. Also, the shallow part of me thinks they're a very hot couple, so…

But I think it was Chris who founded the group, and who persuaded Lou Pearlman to finance them. So not totally useless? At least in the beginning.

Considering that Del Toro intentionally hired a racially diverse cast, I really don't think that's the proper response. And I don't think the take away if it bombs will be "marketing needs to be less racist" so….

I didn't know about their relationship was platonic, and that made me more excited for this movie (already bought tickets, but wasn't expecting a particularly deep experience) because, yeah, that is very, very rare. I wish it would happen more often.

He probably makes more money focusing on rapping than doing Community. A lot of my friends know him for Childish Gambino first, and his TV career second.

When Paramount did a sneak preview of The Last Airbender for Racebending and other bloggers who had complained about the casting, their immediate reaction online afterwards was "holy shit, we're so glad they didn't cast Asians/First Nations peoples" because chances are people would have used the casting of minorities

I've seen it mentioned a few times on this site, but I think it bears repeating — Ned's downfall wasn't that he was too honorable. It was he was too compassionate — hence the warning to Cersei, and the argument against killing Dany. Not to mention his final act is to lie about Joffrey and his own supposed treason in

But a game implies there are rules. The Starks may have been bad at the game, but the game was knowing how to manipulate people and politics within accepted social norms, which had already included brutal acts such as killing, pillaging, etc. The Lannisters, Freys and Boltons have thrown that all out.

The thing about Jaime is that Robb was going to lose him as a prisoner that night one way or another. If Cat hadn't released him he was most probably going to be killed by some drunken soldier — Brienne even explicitly says that he's not going to last the night. If Jaime had died not only would they have lost the

I'm not particularly interested in this version, but the idea of a female Expendables movie from the writers of Legally Blonde is AMAZING. I'd be totally down to see that.

I agree. Out of the main group she's the only one who's been consistently stable, so I'm always interested in what she does. I think a little bit more of her would emphasize what Piecesof8 said better.

I totally didn't think of it going after SVU (I guess since the slot was filled I didn't consider it) but I'd be super down with that. I don't watch SVU anymore, but the sort of crimes it deals with are so terrible and depressing that Hannibal would actually cheer(? not sure if that's the word I'm looking for) me up

I agree that having minority characters without acknowledging their minority status stinks of "but I'm colorblind to skin" type racism, but there are times when I just want  to be entertained, and not be distracted by a homogenous (let's be real, white) cast. This applies primarily to fantasy/sci-fi type shows, where

I've seen Songs for the Deaf regularly included on "Best Albums of the Decade"/"Required albums" types of lists for years, and their later singles, if not as ubiquitous as No One Knows or Go With the Flow, seem to have gotten decent exposure on music channels at least. I think Little Sister did very well in the US

Yeah, I'm honestly a little surprised by OP's assertion. I've definitely seen a lot of overlap at least between women who like Nine Inch Nails and those who like QOTSA.

I'm a woman, and I love QOTSA. But I'm also a lesbian, which I've been told makes "me one of the boys". (Which is problematic but that's an involved and off-topic conversation)

There are a lot of good comments here regarding personal bias pertaining to sexual orientation, but most of the discussion has revolved around gay men. Which is understandable — gay male cinema has a more vibrant community and history than its lesbian counterpart. But I really want to hear what a lesbian critic has to