More like the second Starbucks of the midwest. Starbucks is still the Starbucks of the midwest.
More like the second Starbucks of the midwest. Starbucks is still the Starbucks of the midwest.
I might actually watch it if it was the final episode actually.
Clicking this link is like going to see the broadway play Cats. You assume there's some sort of metaphor or something there, but then, nope. It's actually just cats.
Jon Favreau. "Swingers!" He can suck my dick, it swings too!
The yellow-faced coward.
For me the biggest atrocity is no South Park. (And yes, I know those are available on their website, but STILL)
Why are bluebooks blue?
"We're glad you care about immigration issues".
If you want to stretch it a little I'd say Dinosaurs, but it's hard to disagree.
Home On The Range… classic Roseanne hijinks.
Yeah, I'm starting to realize I don't really know what the fuck I'm talking about. Probably should have just said that I don't personally find this offensive and been done with it.
I would say there's very obviously a time-frame where it becomes OK, at least in our culture. If you think of how we can discuss 9/11 today as opposed to 10 years ago, I think it's obviously evolved and jokes we see on TV or by comedians about the tragedy have become more acceptable. Then going back further the…
"is" really disgusts you, huh?
Good thing I read this review, those trailers must have been really heavily edited to make this look great.
I was saying it probably wouldn't be offensive 300 years from now. My point was these things evolve and we obviously are more bold with jokes about 9/11 now than we were ten years ago. Same with things to do with the Holocaust. Something like Inglorious Basterds wouldn't have happened right afterwards, but it's more…
I guess I just feel like because we're already making jokes about 9/11 and late night hosts crack jokes about things that happened the night before, it's not really offensive to make such an obviously ridiculous show about something that happened so long ago.
But I also seem to have misunderstood the premise of the…
I got the impression that the witches were the good guys in this, but maybe I'm wrong.
But how is it different? If you suggest witches are real in any context you're legitimizing the Salem Witch Trials.
I don't get how this is worse than any show or movie set in any time or place that shows witches as being real. It sounds like they are still being oppressed by religious people, they just happen to actually be witches. I don't really understand the outrage here, but I guess it's a slow day and we need something to be…
This is so offensive. TOO SOON!