One time, this woman explained to me her technique for giving blowjobs while we were hanging out in her room. I thought "that's pretty hot."
One time, this woman explained to me her technique for giving blowjobs while we were hanging out in her room. I thought "that's pretty hot."
I am much more on the "regret sex I didn't have" spectrum.
He should have just been Officer Richard Grayson from the fucking start, by gum!
Any member of the Cobalt Club is all-right with me!
Mmmm…. tacos… (drool)
I can't even remember why I was thinking of Ferris Bueller this morning, but I was. So yeah, it does linger in the back of one's mind, very occasionally charging to the forefront.
Went out for dinner for our anniversary after leaving L'il Punk with my parents. He had a blast, and we ate a ton of sushi and then went out for ice cream. Win-win all around.
The Secret World always sounded totally awesome, like it would be a great RPG even on console, but I just cannot abide MMOs.
I saw it in junior high. It was ridiculous then, and I hope it is even more ridiculous now.
I can see this being more "gritty," I guess. T'Challa is less a superhero and more of a world leader who happens to wear a snazzy cat outfit (for ritual purposes, of course). Political realities in this day and age do not jibe well with four-color superheroics.
Don't encourage him.
Priest's run was pretty spectacular. The Marvel Knights issues were a little odd, because they switched artists like three times - and artists with wildly varying styles, to boot - but once Sal Velluto came on, he stayed with the book 'til almost the end.
His mother's name is Ramonda. (stepmother, actually, but she raised him and he calls her "mom.")
I can only hope that this movie leans into Priest's version hard. THAT was a pretty gritty Avenger known as Eldridge Cleaver, more political thriller than superhero dust-up. Damn, I loved that book.
A superhero movie still has to be true to itself, and that's what superheroes do: solve problems by punching them.
You can tell it was Labor Day when the book reviews have more than a 100 comments apiece.
It's mostly lost in the crosstalk, but Scrawler wrote: "Meanwhile, I don't think anyone has ever loved a poorly plotted story for its worldbuilding. Well maybe Hipster Douchebag."
Yeesh.
Or an inlet, or a fjord.
Rowling was much better at telling a story and getting the reader to turn the next page than she was a world-building. Somebody good at world-building doesn't invent the time-turners, or at least doesn't allow one to be used simply to allow a student to attend two classes at the same time, they think through the…