End of book 3. Had to read it twice to make sure that really happened.
End of book 3. Had to read it twice to make sure that really happened.
All right folks, best running/training montage. GO.
4 months late to the party, but Yukikaze is a crazy story about a love triangle between a man, a man, and a possibly sentient plane. On a planet called Fairy. Still not seeing the hit potential there.
Just the first 1.25 episodes were in too intense for me. (Having read the episode recaps of the rest of episode 2, so glad I didn't continue.) I recognize that it's a great show and I dont mind listening to people rave about it, I'm even pretty curious to retry it every now and then, but I just didn't enjoy watching…
I thought this was going to be one of O'Neal's snarky jokes.
"Nature abhors a vacuum, yet is still oddly fond of Orlando bloom."
Thank you for putting my hate into words. Smart people don't act like that!!
Love this song so much I'm thinking about naming my first kid Brixton. Works for a boy or a girl, I think.
And, god, what a fantastic fuckin' album too.
i just imagined that as one of those 4-panel memes and it was hilarious. God I wish I wasn't too lazy to make that.
I would like to see one with 16 bears that recite random youtube comments.
I need to go gaze upon Chris Pratt's abs again now.
I was SO happy to see it was alive! Fake people on a fake show turning a fake oven on with a live animal inside upset me (I'm a softie). Thank god they are to incompetent (and the appliances too cheap!) to actually kill the duck!
It does seem like Michael is someone you could work with. The staff seems to have their little methods they've developed, like how Pam stays on the line before transferring a call so that Michael can get an awful greeting out of his system. "Nope, still me."
I dunno, that seems like the big revelation to Pam that Jim's in love with her (why else would her "friend" complain about her wedding planning?). Once she realizes what was really behind his complaint, I would think she could be pretty understanding and let that one get swept under the rug.
Yeah, that arc really comes through. I see another layer there, too. I'm not convinced Michael was ever intolerant deep down, he just thought that Packer was a "cool guy" and wanted to do and say all the "cool guy" things. So part of that arc is him realizing that, hey, maybe that's not cool after all.
Yeah Creed is usually just a hilarious good time, but he got that woman fired in "Product Recall!" It was kind of chilling, but totally fits with his self-preservation instinct.
I can't stand it when movies ignore really simple and reliable ways to solve their central mystery (especially when it's a straightforward medical test or examination). If that wasn't bad enough, the found footage and "film school brother" tropes do nothing for a plot like this. Man, this sounds awful.
Yeah, Michael's simple, childlike nature and delusions are what make him tolerable (almost lovable) in this show. I know it's not "cool" but I prefer that to the British version of the boss who has no heart or redeeming qualities. It explains why people still do nice things for Michael and humor him, even when he does…
I've come to fight the pink robot with you again.
Came here to say this!