avclub-63c17d596f401acb520efe4a2a7a01ee--disqus
partdavid
avclub-63c17d596f401acb520efe4a2a7a01ee--disqus

Did this air on HBO?

Outside of just chastity, for a lot of people the "intrusion into everyday life, which makes everyday life more complicated" is a big part of the fetish play. This can be as simple as your dom not letting you wear panties to work or as complex as making your sub to hide a chastity device.

It's not that expensive compared to the boy scout popcorn, which so ridiculously in the stratosphere, price-wise, that it's more comparable to the special "gifts" you get when you pledge large donations to a public television station.

For some reason, when I read this, I read it as "Dodge Turmp", which I like even better.

I don't really sympathize with either Ray or Adam, and I especially don't find them likeable. Ray is also not interesting, whereas Adam kind of is.

I break down when people are genuinely nice to me. I can barely handle it. And it's hard not to push away when that happens, though I do it differently than Hannah. I loved the episode.

Don't forget yams in your lady business and, like, a mask made of shit.

Unfortunately, Judd Apatow didn't have anything to do with Zack and Miri, so you're stuck with one example.

Unfortunately, Judd Apatow didn't have anything to do with Zack and Miri, so you're stuck with one example.

An Austrian, and, therefore, even more German.

@Monkeylint Liked for manchego!

And In Bruges (which I loved as well) was hamstrung by terrible trailers and marketing, too. I came really close to not seeing it because of how godawful the trailers made it seem.

And In Bruges (which I loved as well) was hamstrung by terrible trailers and marketing, too. I came really close to not seeing it because of how godawful the trailers made it seem.

This is my thinking too. It seems to risk them looking and acting too similar.

I hate it! There are so many reasons:

Singular "they" has been well-established for a long time, people use it naturally and it sounds good. Only "they" and "he or she" are gramatically and semantically correct. As far as I'm concerned there's no ambiguity: you say "they," or you say "he or she" if it doesn't sound awkward.

There is a ride in Disneyland in which you literally visit Hell.

Han laughing at stuff—not as comic relief, but as a rogue, and puncturing the stentoriousness and self-seriousness of it all—had a huge amount to do with why the original movies worked. Remove his roguish charm and you have the prequels.

That could be a reasonable perspective on the cheating itself, but he also counterattacked and tried to ruin people in the press and through lawsuits for telling the truth.

I grew up in Sacramento, California, where it is more or less Aerosmith Day every day.