The Producers, following an arc like Little Shop of Horrors.
The Producers, following an arc like Little Shop of Horrors.
Hip-hop-a-billy is okay, though.
It certainly does in a court of law!
Sam's family will be super thrilled with her and welcome her into safe, open arms.
It's all about faking it. I think people are getting a little too mystical with the "a girl" and many-faced god stuff.
We're not exactly privy to what she did or said, but having been on the receiving end of "vibes" I'm not going to just assume they're imaginary.
I'm kind of not fine with it. I happen to live in an area where this kind of stuff is pretty common for the size of the community. Like, local businesses will put a chemtrails flyer up in a window, I got stopped on the street once, and one of the local schools (which is otherwise awesome as an alternative education…
He's saying he wants mutually-desired sex, not duty sex. That's not unreasonable. There is, or should be, a lot of problem-solving context not in the letter; why Dan didn't point that out ("hey, you should be figuring this and its solution out with your relationship communication, not ultimatums") is beyond me.
Dan, and most of the commentariat, are woefully unprepared to answer questions about the sex life of married couples dying off, and are hung up on stereotyped narratives about married sex and gender roles in a relationship.
Children decrease the happiness of married couples by about 30%.
Yeah, it's pretty universal. As an involved and now single dad who's always been my kids' "primary parent" I've gotten a lot of questions like when is mom (subtext: the real parent) showing up to the doctor or why are you taking your kid to gymboree or the park.
I might have watched that. I found the premise too gross and distasteful to live with it at all, and although I persisted for, like, 7 episodes, it was all still just lobotomy rape.
If you think the wildlings can't be trusted to fight—say, because their current main leader was an invader who killed northerners and brothers and led sadistic cannibals to rape, murder and eat your people—then any fighting prowess, ability or numbers they have is all a liability. Your best bet would be to man the…
Oh yes, for sure, I just think he also may have swung the axe that killed Ollie's mother.
You just had to cram Moorcock in it.
Yeah, that's all I meant, only some people were getting confused at this point and thinking it's Sam's baby.
On the show, Jon's plan to have the wildlings help against the Walkers seems pretty cockamamy. Mance Rayder was uniquely able to organize them into an army (a shitty army that stills likes murdering civilians and includes sadistic cannibals in its ranks). Now the idea that they'll be some kind of fighting force under…
I guess, but Styr died fighting, he wasn't "executed," and Slynt was.
There's no "right" amount to hit Arya with sticks. If we cut it down to too episodes, she's "learning too fast."
Coudn't stand it.