I am so sorry for you. Best wishes.
I am so sorry for you. Best wishes.
Not to defend what Dan said, but it makes much more sense than what the "passionate fan" said since 1) Dan is probably being honest and 2) losing the (only?) person you love is far, far, far worse than losing a TV show you really like.
I don't get it.
Chomsky Normal Form is all I know him from. It's useful, I guess.
I really think it's important for people to separate their thoughts on "John Green" the person and "John Green" the symbol.
Seeing as you only reviewed select episodes…two and a half stars.
It took me surprisingly long to find it. I kept getting videos from entertainment sites that were basically slideshows of paragraphs of text set to music recanting how the interview went down. Here it is: https://www.youtube.com/wat…
I'm don't think you know what you're talking about. If you want to learn more about Quantum Mechanics, this video (https://www.youtube.com/wat… in a pretty great series of videos explains that superposition isn't just two states being true at once, it's a entirely new concept.
Hey, 2013-14 called. It wants its Rick and Morty reference back.
True, although it's misleading to state that until observed the cat is both "alive and dead" since it's not fully both alive and dead. The cat a new type of existence, a superposition.
The fucking-with-Jared part of that joke was great, but it was an annoyingly inaccurate interpretation of quantum mechanics from two characters who should either know better or at least acknowledge that that's not at all what QM says.
What episode is that from?
Rick and Morty has the only good Schrödinger's cat joke I've ever heard.
Four minutes. Four minutes later.
Wait, if the curse is that one senior will die every year, and one senior has already died that year, why be worried another senior or group of seniors will die? Isn't the curse over, at least for a year? Like, do they all get held back or something so that they're seniors again?
I feel that the accuser's argument starts to fail around when he or she states, "it's always girls who feel misunderstood, you know?"
It's probably a good thing those choices are split by an "or."
It is his design.
It will be the episode before the season finale so that fans are teased then left without fulfillment.
I have yet to see this episode, but its title reminds me of a conversation I once had in high school.