avclub-6f611188ad4a81ffc2edab83b0705d76--disqus
Sean ONeal
avclub-6f611188ad4a81ffc2edab83b0705d76--disqus

Gang Of Four, The Fall, and Joy Division, I'd say. You could also argue for OMD, Public Image, and maybe even Gary Numan.

This is you.

I haven't read the books.

Yes, that's probably another reason why Dave Chappelle left Chappelle's Show.

Not to spoil anything, but the Edge thing doesn't go unremarked upon in the show.

Yes, that's really the name of the Salinger story.

I specifically went to the trouble of clarifying that they're not the same person. JOKE NEGATED.

They went on two roller coasters in the movie. Revolution was the first one.

Wrong. My wife loves that movie.

He was actually South African, but spied for the Germans because of his hatred for the British.

Yes, I think you're misunderstanding me—or at least overlooking the part where I say it's how they coalesce that gives them that resonance. "Feet on the ground, head in the sky" is a banal non sequitur. "I love the passing of time" is a non sequitur. "There was a time before we were born…" is a non sequitur that isn't

David Byrne himself said this in Stop Making Sense:

I was at that show. Hearing this song live was one of my all-time favorite concert moments.

Until he is saying that.

*Kills OtherJimDonahue*

Or, at the top of the page.

Yeah, I don't agree that The Lego Movie and Jupiter Ascending have anywhere close to the same chances of appealing to a broad, all-ages audience, regardless of their both being "tentpoles" (which, now that it's being relegated to February, is a pretty loose application of that term). But your plucky optimism is

And the belief that The Lego Movie and Jupiter Ascending are clearly courting two different audiences, but sure.

What I'm saying is we're all just brains in jars, experiencing a collective delusion of existence.

Oh, because there were two Star Wars stories today.