It's probably the epitaph of generations boomer through millennial.
It's probably the epitaph of generations boomer through millennial.
Yeah, I'm sorry if I came off too negative, I thought it was really cool on the whole and it was a very good reminder of how much good work has been done since the late 90s.
That is one place where I feel it really worked.
There was not nearly enough classic Hollywood and the lack of the Danny Kay fighting in the Court Jester is an egregious oversight.
I think that reading would still work if you think of the agency (or, at least, the part of the agency that employs Peggy) as sort of grant reporting with teeth. That, yes, they are exploring the fringe but with a strong eye towards regulating it. Which - in the wake of the war - would lead to a lot of policing. For…
You are wrong. What you are is a true hero.
There are also sad and bad grads.
I really need that translated into Latin and put on a fake diploma so it can sit safely on my wall at work.
Oh what are you? An Englishes teacher?
Okey dokes.
That is a very cool read on Krypton.
To be fair, that is one of many potential lessons you could get from the mid-west.
It's why I end up in terrible fights with people who want biology to replace literature in gen ed requirements.
During the same period he wrote an honestly very good essay on Moby Dick, so my theory is that he's just one of those types who has a talent and cares nothing for it - so his capacity to 'read well' only maps up with good readings like 50% of the time.
His adventure time comics are vgood, but on the 'this is a thing I should never not buy when I am buying things' side of the line not on the 'my library has a hole in it name Ryan North and if I don't fill it my baby will be slow' side.
I fully predict that the worst singular hour of horror I experience this year will be the dread discovery that I reset my FB settings somehow enabling "I fucking love science" posts to flow through my space like the blob overlayed with D- grade wildlife photography.
Woof, I like this movie, but it brings up unpleasant memories of a guy who recommended it in high school. He's an all right dude and objectively turned out ok, but this recommendation turned out to be the first (well, second really after bringing to his house to listen to a LOT of Jello Biafra rants) sign of his…
Eh, party politics is for rich people and identity politics either way. While I'm very averse to the 'the parties are identical' phenomena neither of them are exactly set up to promote radically different policy directions and the chances that either party will elect someone who doesn't have an Ivy League degree is…
Eh, it's an interesting conundrum. It's much easier to afford to live in a red state, it's just harder to afford to do anything else.
Oh paid, yes, absolutely paid.