avclub-48c0b3cf0c62e40eeff5a9b07a63d953--disqus
El Crab
avclub-48c0b3cf0c62e40eeff5a9b07a63d953--disqus

I have the El Dorado Fortress, and the Trading Post. I think the Trading Post was the last LEGO set I ever got as a kid.

When I saw the first trailer and the space guy appeared with the cracked helmet, I went nuts. Great reference to those of us that had the first space sets.

I got Metalbeard's Duel mainly for the pieces, but the build was fun. I have been making up for lost time by buying shedloads of sets through work, oftentimes duplicates. I've actually purchased 5 Mirkwood Elf Army sets (and probably counting), because of the selection of pieces and I resell the minifigs online to

Well played, sir.

I kept all of my LEGO from when I was a kid, but just recently I've started buying new sets. A 20% discount through work with the added bonus of the order sitting up front, just waiting for me to claim it when I leave is a dangerous thing.

Must be the Serious Play set, which is for team building or some shit.

Absolutely not! LEGO bricks, LEGO elements, or simply LEGO.

Same birthdays! 1978 for me, though.

The Cardigans are fucking awesome, and I won't have their good name sullied by one overplayed bit of pop candy.

ISWYDT.

My advice is to do what your parents did: get a job, sir.

Indeed. And I sure as shit wouldn't refer to Blood Meridian as an "oater".

Before Walt was, meth waited for him. The ultimate drug trade awaiting its ultimate practitioner.

Personally, I think the only way to do it is a 10 part series. There's just too much that I'd deem essential for it all to fit in even a 3 or 4 hour movie.

That might be the reason why I haven't read all of his books, despite owning every one of them and my constant thoughts of getting to them all. I might be subconsciously afraid of running out of new McCarthy to read, and even though I think it's time to pile them up and go through each book, I stop short of actually

I believe he's writing a book with a female protagonist presently.

I forget where I got it from, but I have a text file with all of the translations. Obviously McCarthy didn't want a non-Spanish speaking person to know what they were saying. To me, it adds to the scenes themselves, since I would guess the characters have a similar basic grasp of Spanish as the reader, so the

I love The Avett Brothers unconditionally, so I'm sure I'll like this one just fine.

The Walking Pneumonia.