That's because the article that's up right now is not the obit, just a placeholder for the obit, so you have a place to discuss her death in the meantime. And, as we usually do in that situation, we'll change it to "R.I.P." once the full obit is up.
That's because the article that's up right now is not the obit, just a placeholder for the obit, so you have a place to discuss her death in the meantime. And, as we usually do in that situation, we'll change it to "R.I.P." once the full obit is up.
Yes, we're working on an obit.
—he said, in a telling summation of his life.
Perhaps, however, considering the other historical arguments for its usage, we can be given some leeway to referring casually to Cymbeline as a "tragedy," in an article about Ethan Hawke making it into a movie about a drug-dealing biker gang.
By modern critics, maybe. It's still listed as a tragedy in the First Folio. Its alternate title is even The Tragedy Of Cymbeline.
http://www.amazon.com/The-T…
From Erik's transcript of Bridges: "And I said, 'Where did you get that, man?' I wanted to get one. And you can get them online. So if you really were Sea Hunt fan, you know where"
It will be written about in another article. You'll be able to tell because the headline will suggest that the story is about that, and then the text will confirm it.
Ha, weird. I didn't even notice that. I changed the photo.
You think I don't know where my yard begins??
Do you work in an office where guys just have their dicks out?
I just had to check to make sure I don't actually know you, because for real, my friend Brent didn't turn out so great….
Autre Ne Veut isn't bad, but it treads a little too closely to Steve Winwood for my tastes. And personally I wouldn't classify Classixx as anything close to R&B, electronic or otherwise. It sounds like straight-up house music meets early-'90s dance pop like Nu Shooz or Stacy Q to me. But hey, to each their own.
I also hate to nitpick, but the "raping Marge" gag is not a silent joke (as you'll hear in the linked clip, they do share dialogue about it). And the mass murder of the family was in a later scene, but still within the same episode.
If you're getting "withering contempt" directed at Mary-Louise Parker in this, I'm not sure my articles are for you.
I think it rubs you the wrong way and comes off as "incessant nonstop shitting" primarily because you are such a fan. Certainly on that last point. This is, what, the second or third time I've written about Moore? The last time was a year and a half ago.
Jordo, just so we don't get off on any of our own recycled ideas, we had this same discussion on the last Alan Moore article linked up there. And again, I don't have anything "against" Alan Moore. I don't know what you think is "out of context bullshit" or a "basic failure to misunderstand artistic intentions" here. I…
I don't think anyone disagrees that adaptations of Moore's works have always been underwhelming, if not out-and-out bad. (I certainly don't.) But it would behoove Moore to make that point, rather than always taking this same principled stand on "recycling" and "using other people's ideas," considering. No one would…
You seem to have missed the several paragraphs explaining, in detail, why Alan Moore's position comes off as hypocritical. And then confused the pointing out of that hypocrisy with "hating." And then decided this discussion is invalid, because there are other comic book artists you don't like.