avclub-c305906bce98a870409f20115c7cd4e7--disqus
radioactive badger
avclub-c305906bce98a870409f20115c7cd4e7--disqus

He mentioned it but it needs to hammered over and over again—everything has to be done to prevent governments like Russia, China, Turkey, from getting a master key, and to start here is going to give them precedence which would very likely lead to strangling dissident movements in those countries.

Coal.

Persian descent who lived in India.

please explain what a PG sex scene looks like

no. Hollywood is still feeling the aftereffects of Passion of the Christ, while forgetting that it was made by a true believer, who had plenty of experience and (at the time) had tremendous clout. This stinks of cynicism and what the fuck is David (?) wearing?! ARE THOSE FUCKING TROUSERS? A hick (and going by the

Right on. Wilmore is trying to say that he's a pro-science guy and he's always been a space nerd, but he doesn't realize that the perspective of his show is confused as long as an idiot like Velez is there as a writer and a panelist. I think his show started off really strong thanks to a distinct point of view, but

Yep. If a show can demonstrate it brings in a wealthier demo, it's safe. I think it should've gone up on Netflix much earlier than it was, so it could've gotten better buzz.

Good job on consistently missing the point: by leaving she would need references for a future job, which would be shit if she were a persona non grata, who facilitated other personas non grata. Furthermore, she would probably have to get out of the region entirely and start at a fairly lowly position. These are things

Bars in Portland that catered to messenger bikers were selling PBR tallboys for a buck in the early 2000s. Early hipsterism was all about copying that look (bike, bag, beer) with none of the shitkicking.

Right. References and being in a fairly small world. If she wanted to quit she would probably have to leave the southwest entirely, and start a job that's nowhere near partner track.

The trouble is for Nacho is that for either the cops or for the Salamancas is that he needs an alibi. For the cops he can't snitch because he's (as he put it) "a known affiliate," nor drawing suspicion as a snitch from the cartel. For the Salamancas he has to have a reason why he wasn't hit as well, since it would

Right. Jimmy wasn't wrong. He was gauche, and that's what they find offensive, and that's what their clients find offensive.

Not even that wrong in the corporate hierarchy sense, but that Jimmy violated an "Unwritten rule of the game" that serves to keep the chumps who only know about the actual rulebook away from the actual power. Jimmy's ad was the high fastball that gets away from the pitcher, which leads to one of his teammates getting

Expert Witness: What's it like to have to be constantly worried that a Kardashian might suddenly show up?

I would love it if PolitiFact could host a debate. Forty-five minutes of standard debate and then forty-five minutes of response and rebuttal with the fact-checkers.

I'll agree with you on that one on all counts. He and Ron Wyden make a nice team.

GET YOUR A'S READY!

Daniel Olbrychski. A native Pole who has experience working in English. As for the Sisters look through Wajda's, Polanski's and Kieslowski filmography until you find some good fits. Agnieszka Holland could help with the casting as well and direct that particular episode.

Try the audiobook of Neverwhere. It's just Gaiman reading the full version of the story. Neverwhere is Gaiman's Blade Runner in that there's been at least four different versions of it, but the audiobook is his definitive take.

On the page about Shadow I stumped for McShane. But that's not a big deal for me.