"In his movies." Right….
"In his movies." Right….
14. Patrick Leahy, Batman & Robin (1997)
I don't know why we ever let you people have the Internet.
Were there as many turkeys in the 70s as I've been led to believe?
I agree. Otherwise, we lose a perfectly good word for "having no personal stake in" and redundantly have two very similar words for "not interested in." Insofar as that is an impoverishment of the language—however minor—I think it justifies a prescriptivist view in this case.
@avclub-cfe912f5cb3aa572bd1c9ae2a9b82207:disqus @avclub-6d8e5be200a835beb77d899f00b890a5:disqus Right, (k) prescribes that burning is the preferable method of disposal for flags, but it doesn't say that it is the "only recourse" for violations of (b).
Which reminds me of this from Squidbillies:
Freedom.
If you're not real
Then how come I feel
This way
Little babies…
Uh uh uh!
@avclub-f3165be83d2dd835403b494eb7185ce2:disqus Except something to aspire to.
"Of course I'm licensed. Please continue."
People Who Eat Darkness is quite good, I thought.
When Will is in the interrogation room (either with Alana or Jack), I think he sees the Wendigo on the other side of the glass.
When Gary says he accepted another job—JLD's facial expression was amazing—you can tell Selina expected that he would work for her for the rest of her life.
Yeah, I thought there's supposed to be some kind of "probably said" with the fake quotations.
@avclub-236e42b5af241c85d97910f5c1aa6107:disqus How is "a Japanese" different from "an Italian" or "an Egyptian"?
You sound like one of those people who…
Both with secret Brits for male leads.
I'm glad Fuller tweeted that, to make up for this: