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Libidinous Kettle
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Misogynists are either going to love this or hate it. And this disturbance is what happens when True Detective S2 and Fargo S2 touch, or in this case, kiss.

No, please, you're fine! I do have to write these things with more precision so it's clearer I'm joking, when people write crazy stuff completely sincerely so you have no idea if they mean it or not.

No, problem! It wasn't apparent I was joking about that line. I started out writing, "Pity the man starting out in the public arena, knowing he will be assailed by…" and then got the image of that famous painting of a man with his back to us looking at the incoming waves.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wi…
And decided to

Hi, again! We had this conversation about this same subject yesterday if you'll recall. I guess my humor will always strike out with you. Oh, well, C'est la vie.

Just as O'Reilly pointed out, being in the public eye automatically means you will be accused of terrible, criminal behavior against women. It's a natural fact, like the tides.

The brave man starting out as a public figure, knows all too well that he will be assailed on all sides by critics and women falsely accusing him of sexual assault/harassment, but he stands proudly on the wave-swept rocks beckoning the ocean of opprobrium to do its worst—he will weather this storm and DO GREAT THINGS!

Finally, hopefully, our long commercial nightmare will be over. I saw more ads for this season's Fargo than I ever saw for anything else in my life.

I took it as his way of saying "staunch" in his accent.

I feel like some of the recent clues are designed just to be guesses, because they don't have any concrete information that could identify the answer. Like the president's bible question; I thought it was LBJ based on Trebek's accent. Ani in DJ deflated and rang in a lot fewer times.

Maybe if Philip was a lot more frayed and after just comforting his daughter about her breakup blamed the Centre for it, but that would have been a lot longer setup and scene with Paige and then a scene by himself thinking about something or a very hurt expression on his face before he visits Gabriel. As is, I don't

S'all good. Next time I'll make my jokes clearer; I didn't even realize it could have been read as a joking defense of that piece of shit, your are correct there.

Paige-hate was and remains always baffling to me. I mean the show's entire dramatic purpose, the way it's been written, is for us to sympathize with Paige. Otherwise the themes don't land and the show's a failure at what it's trying to do and has done.

Like previous others, this episode went particularly strong on the real villain of the show being state ideology that wrecks individual people. Elizabeth's casual line: "No it isn't, Phillip. Not for me." is dark and sad. Having watched the series finale of Review tonight, I didn't expect a similarity between

Oh, good, another assassin movie. We haven't had those in a while. My submission for Hollywood Review: What's it like not making any more spy/superhero/people getting murdered with high-tech guns movies?

I didn't even think it would be offensive. I just then noticed that "hot chocolate" and "brown sugar" were the same thing and was making a joke on that. Apologies that I offended people.

Yes, I was. Dumb joke was dumb.

The New Yorker for some reason recently profiled Tucker Carlson.

I wonder if there's anything like this with Hannity.

What if you're doing your Tim Taylor impression and the woman misunderstands?

"Hot chocolate" really isn't all that different from "Brown Sugar"; why isn't Mick Jagger being sued, huh?