Back then that wasn't a feel they intentionally went for, though. It just meant you had a rudimentary script and indifferent director.
Back then that wasn't a feel they intentionally went for, though. It just meant you had a rudimentary script and indifferent director.
"Jeez, first you complain about us doing nothing but remakes, and now you complain about the Randomizerbot®. What the hell do you people want from us?!"
Do they write actual human characters into these things, or are these casting announcements just for voice acting, as in the "live action" Jungle Book?
I almost managed that myself.
Or a Hennigan's: the no-smell, no-tell Scotch.
So are Google's algorithms actually linking "pornography" with "stuffed"? Now that would be an interesting programming discussion.
Duck nipples are certainly… puzzling. I was more comfortable with the generally more controversial "Duckhouse", notorious for its cloaca pics…
Probably while cleaning out his grandmother's house after she passed away.
They make perfect business sense as a way of encouraging people to arrive early, and maybe actually pay attention to some of the crap advertising (some irreverent, more engaging, LaChoy-esque advertisements would also help). It's a wonder we're not seeing a lot more of them.
It can definitely be both things.
I was surprised that the "Albinoni" Adagio in G Minor wasn't mentioned by Vago, as I think that's probably the most widely heard orchestral example of this there is (used in TV shows from Space: 1999 to Bob's Burgers), but I gather there remains some controversy over its "hoax" status.
It's always baffled me how utterly their music disappeared, given how omnipresent it was. You'd think the actual performers would have been able to spin some sort of career out of it. Or is that just due to rights issues, whereby they couldn't have legally performed their own hits.
I would, but I'm just about to head out to smuggle arms to the Mexican pavilion.
It's got to be safer than standing anywhere near Sean Bean.
It's led me to wonder whether there may have been more of this sort of thing going on back in the 19th and early-20th centuries, when communications were limited, and markets like Iceland more geographically and linguistically isolated — translators pretty much just cutting loose and publishing their own "fan fiction"…
Honor has historically often been more about personal ties of blood and loyalty than about codified rules.
Upvoted for the very idea of warring Epcot states.
Agreed. Given the number of "hippies', you'd think at least some could have escaped or reached the Hound before the three bandits could catch them all. Or that the bandits would have been there for a while raping and collecting food and valuables even after doing most of the killing.
"And then, without warning, life broke out…"
I think she viewed that as an execution — well past the point of requiring "honor".