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AutomaticJack
avclub-4852640db22c9773ff0c79821326f766--disqus

True, but he also gave us the "Life According To Conan" strip.

Something Positive is indeed awesome, as well as xkcd. Tasha definitely gets points.

I refused to ever, ever, ever watch "Batman and Robin"… but once the Rifftrax for it came out, I've seen it a dozen times.

No, radical athiests are like anything group with axes to grind - if a particular scientific theory seemingly goes against their belief system, it must be wrong - and if they think a theory validates them, then they'll shove it into everyone's face.
And speaking as someone with a degree in science, science isn't

Nonsense. There's been a sudden upsurge in interdisciplinary programs in the sciences in the last couple of decades.

Sorry, if Feynman could get along with strippers, so can you.

I was amazed when I found out that Al's first choice for Philo was Joel Hodgson - who turned it down because he was working on some bizarre show involving puppets watching bad movies over at a real-life UHF station…

I still like the original Batman; I just consider it (and the next one) more like "Tim Burton's Batman".

After seeing Beetlejuice the first time I thought I had a crush on Winona Ryder, but it turned out I just like goth girls.

Elvira (a.k.a Cassandra Peterson) is a friend of Paul Reubens, which is why she appeared in "Pee-Wee's Big Adventure". He was supposed to do a cameo in the Elvira movie, but couldn't because of other commitments.

Yeah, rnaoncfixd, I remember that episode - it had Edgar Allen Poe coming back, wailing for his lost Lenore, and Beetlejuice going 'round and 'round in situations straight out of Poe, and generally going insane.
The joke is, of course, that Lenore had just gone to the store and shows up at the end.

Such a bizarrely subversive cartoon, after growing up with fare like "The Smurfs" - or even worse, the legion of poorly animated 70s cartoons that dominated Cartoon Network in its pre-SpaceGhostCoastToCoast days.
I liked how they couldn't say it was an afterlife - it's the "Neitherworld" in the cartoon - but what's a

How Absurd
Almost as absurd as missing out on FOX's stellar Sunday night line-up this weekend!

Nathan, I thought you went too far
… and then I read up on Eric Shaeffer.

Why don't you try registering, troll?

Let's also dispense with the "athiesm is the friend of science" nonsense. The term 'big bang' was meant to be derisive, created by a scientist who thought it was too 'religious' in nature, and then proceeded to create a completely ludicrious theory called 'steady state' solely to reflect his personal belief system.

That was really the best part, treating it like a 'virtual tour' of the various DHARMA stations…

It's really a 'pre-Internet' kind of TV show, yeah… but then again, Leonard Nimoy has a great voice (even his most recent work on Civilization IV is still top-notch)

It seemed clear in the end that Andrew was adopted, yet their parents used the fact that Matthew was a clueless spaz to trick him into "keeping the secret that Matthew was adopted from him".
The crew seemed pretty convinced by Matthew's picture…

Good Stuff
I was hoping for something like this. I like all the "extra bits" given. (Although the video games was a huge letdown).