avclub-d7f43e1fb2d4977c86163d9b0cb07814--disqus
I Will Probably Forget This Qu
avclub-d7f43e1fb2d4977c86163d9b0cb07814--disqus

They did a whole subplot about Skylar's job, why she had to quit, why she briefly returned to it. Part of it was Walt's pride, part of it was the boss openly hitting on her. I can't remember if she went back to the job after she got pregnant.

You mean Bushy Top?

I don't think there is a person alive — certainly not under 40 — who can watch "The Price Is Right" without thinking of their grandmother.

It wouldn't, presumably most people watch both. I'd bet there's a slight uptick in the last ten minutes, though.

They don't "tax the hell" out of it. The value of the prize is taxed as the equivalent of income.

He was fleeing to Cuba. How much more bizarre do you want?

I figure he was going to shave his chest as the disguise, but he couldn't bear to live without his natural chest hair, so he was going to keep the chest wig for when he didn't need to be disguised.

Just to be clear, your theory is that a place where college kids could get together, do a bunch of drugs, get drunk, and experiment with various forms of sex, especially while drunk and on drugs, you think that would've been on the decline in popularity in the 1970's?

"Guy from ALI and THE GREAT WHITE HYPE to make a boxxing movie."

I really liked Foxx before he became Electro, except that it's weird to have a nerd in a Spider-Man movie who isn't Peter Parker (and a Peter Parker in a Spider-Man movie who isn't a nerd).

He's not really "dirty" until the vengeance. I also liked that they make it really clear, he isn't a particularly *good* cop. His dad was a good cop, his friend Lewis is a good cop, but he's just an average cop.

You don't need to redefine words to get an answer.

First off, you mean "Group 1 stays on for the first two uses." You don't need a third weighing against Group 1, based on what you're trying.

That would only tell you which group of three was off, not which person.

Because splitting the 12 up into two groups of six is really obviously a waste of a move.

The second weighing tells you whether the odd man is light or heavy based on whether the "equal" group is moved upward or downward.

Boyle's "bias" is based on observed behavior. Peralta's bias is based on what he wants to be happening.

You are correct about Step 1, 4 vs 4. Step 2 gets crazy complicated to explain, because it depends on what happens in Step 1. Step 3 always boils down to either knowing whether the man is light or heavy, and not knowing which of 3 is the odd man out (weigh 1 vs 1), or knowing which is the odd man out and using the

See, this is the problem; you try to shut down the conversation by attacking the word, because the criticism itself is subjective while the word feigns objectivity, but then, when push comes to shove, you actually reveal that you disagree with the criticism, and feel that your disagreement is objective. You can't

Shortly before I started at my job, a guy was fired when he got caught masturbating in the breakroom. Two things made it extra unusual; one was that he apparently did it regularly, and would look out the window and make eye contact at one of the women (who was not the one who "caught" him; my understanding is, no