Maybe it's a different Arnold Schwarzenegger.
Maybe it's a different Arnold Schwarzenegger.
You should have not responded to it, like Lucille Bluth.
Oh wow, I just thought I misunderstood and that you were saying that Exarchopoulos in the shower looks like Brie Larson not necessarily in the shower. Sounds like I'm about to get a Long Term 12. Wait, no.
Update: And now a black guy who went to our high school posted it. This is surreal. I'm pretty sure the article's biggest insight is on the kind of sentence it says is likely to be given. Maybe people are thinking that it says a sentence already was given?
Really? I always saw him as more of a Yeats. His emerald sheen, I guess.
I keep reading that as "trashed poets are best poets." Also true, I suppose.
Where did you get such specific intel on what Brie Larson looks like showering asking for a friend
I would argue that it's simply a fact that Wayans and Morris have very similar hair styles and facial hair styles. Winston usually doesn't have a fuller beard like Morris does here: http://static.wetpaint.me/n…
They obviously look completely different otherwise. Schmidt and Nick's faces are more similar than Coach and…
Maybe some people are angry at numbers, like Beavis and Butthead.
CofCC is pretty well-known to be a hate group, but I don't think they're going anywhere.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wik…
Oh yeah, the Mail's comment section is bad, but imagine a group/website headed by those people and committed to their fringe ideals.
Okay, so is this gonna get really heavy in at least two different ways, but here goes. I don't know how widely know this story is, but last year a kid I graduated from high school with was killed after being punched just once in the face. Here's the UK's Daily Mail's story from then:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/…
I really don't have a moment like that. By the time I sat down to watch all of the episodes in order, I already was familiar with and loved the show. My middle-aged dad was actually a regular viewer before I was. We watched some of the pilot for Chevy when it first aired, and I liked it, but I only caught bits and…
I was talking about the accepted one, but even then, it's a dangerously loose term that obviously isn't written down anywhere. I'm sure it would be easy to find an expert's version of The Canon that's based entirely on quality over influence, but for the sake of this discussion, that's not how I was viewing it.
Fun fact: I'm pretty sure that expression is where the phrase "die hard" originally comes from. Like even in the term "die hard fan."
Yeah, I think it depends on how much historical perspective you want to get on cinema or philosophy or whatever.
I'm torn. On one hand, you're agreeing with me. On the other, you got my last initial wrong. I'm gonna chalk it up as a net gain.
I still think that influence is more important than quality as far as canon (and a hair easier to prove). But maybe "should" is unnecessarily commanding. The canon could also be reevaluated to include a wider, more diverse selection.
I get your meaning, but I think there's something to be said for knowing the works that are widely considered to be the most influential of any art you're serious about. Somebody who's interested in popular music of the 1960s and/or later on a deeper level than just occasional listening for a fun diversion should…