Yes, a black Johnny Storm was that movie's biggest problem.
Yes, a black Johnny Storm was that movie's biggest problem.
Master of None had a great episode going into this sort of thinking. And from co-creator Alan Yang: "Thank you to all of the straight white guys who dominated movies and TV so hard and for so long that stories about anyone else seem kind of fresh and original now."
It's a lose-lose, but I wish they'd gone with the other lose really.
Eat, Pray, Love
You should sound it out first.
Robin floats to the sky in terrible CGI metaphor.
Spider-Man's just a neighborhood kid. You know, Donald Trump.
That sounds awesome! Is it just getting released on the Kindle?
I've heard a lot of good things about the Three-Body Problem. I'll have to check it out. How was the translation?
And Dogget really didn't care for Lodger.
Yeah, I assumed snark was involved, as I know that's a big part of her style.
Three Kingdomssssss. I found it wildly helpful to play video games based on it first. It really helped me keep the characters straight until (spoilers?) they started dying off some 70 years into the history. Amazing work of literature though.
How's Sarah Vowell's book? Hamilton made me think I should actually look into the guy, and I know her style goes down easy.
This past month, I read:
Dr Doom's a pretty good leader. Hawkish to a fault, but good on domestic issues.
I'd say protect Alan Moore from 2016's Death Fog, but he's probably invoking his own hexes to that purpose…or some other purpose…
My memory for books I read in high school (middle school?) is utter crap. However, I know for certain that To Kill a Mockingbird did what great art should do: it inspired empathy. The story challenged me to see the way other people live. How their lives are similar, how they're different, and what's right and wrong…
I would read/pay for/attend that so fast.
Come see the violence inherent in the system!
I DON'T LIKE THIS THING. AND THIS IS WHAT I'M DOING TO IT.