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sirgawain
avclub-95ce0cf108144189ab50cfbd644539c0--disqus

I was going to write Sinister here in case it didn't show up. While I've seen the movie multiple times, it scares me more than any other horror movies ever has. The thing is, the story isn't all that scary, and the execution of the story elements aren't all that scary either. But the soundtrack, lighting, etc - all

If the plaintiff wins, do the damages count as post-petition debts? How would that fit into the debtor's payment plan, in this case?

But what about Jared's aides?

I think that's averaged out around Salem, Peabody, Swampscott, and Marblehead, though. The latter two are absolutely ridiculously filthy rich; and if you ask anyone from those towns, they'd tell you that they don't hang out in Salem very often. Just driving on Route 1 from Boston is depressing.

I drive through Salem a lot and most of it is an industrial wasteland. It's kind of sad that the only economy sustaining the city is the tourism.

I would definitely disagree that the show only worked for two and a half seasons. Nancy Botwin's story in the later seasons basically laid the groundwork for everything that happens on Breaking Bad, and it's kind of weird that there aren't more comparisons between the two here.

She wrote 20,000 words of it for a charity auction in 2011 back when it was a fanfic. I never read the original fanfic so I don't know how much of it is recycled, but I remember when she wrote it because she was really shitty to all her fans about not wanting to do it.

Mentula moechatur, certe.

My thoughts exactly.

I know, right? Every time I read good fic I think, "How did crap like Fifty Shades get published."

On the one hand a lot of the dialogue around this book is "lol, look at women having sexual feelings, gross," but on the other hand, the book really is a despicable portrayal of an unhealthy and abusive relationship; meanwhile - as you said - the author and publishers present the entire thing as something deeply

Currently in the process of reading this book. For the record, I read the first three (eh, two and a half, I couldn't get through the third one) and didn't like them, so I wasn't expecting to like this one either. But I wasn't expecting it to be *this* bad.

"Tennant will play Tony’s partner, the rotund and verbose Mason Savoy." So are they going to do a reverse Willy Loman on him?

Okay, so I finally watched this. Full disclosure, my best friend and I basically get together every weekend and watch a bunch of Lifetime movies (this has been going on for the past five years). We absolutely love them. We love guessing the plot twists (spoiler alert, on last night's "The Good Sister," it turned out

I've loved this movie for years and had no clue that Kay Hanley was the vocals. Holy crap.

I'm actually ridiculously gleeful that this article exists, because this album was my JAM when I was ten (dating me instantly). I think I owned two copies for some reason and it was generally the only CD to take up residence in my Sony Walkman.

I hope that Sony and Marvel fight long enough that Civil War gets made with zero appearances from Spider-Man.

The person who wrote this article officially knows way too much about these books.

Except that that's an extremely narrow view of the Middle Ages?

I will see this movie for Jason Statham, just like I've seen every other Jason Statham movie for Jason Statham, including In the Name of the King and the One, so.