He was taking Melfi's advice. He was acting "as if."
He was taking Melfi's advice. He was acting "as if."
Actually, the line is: "What is this, the fucking UN now?"
He swam with the sharks and got eaten.
He swam with the sharks and got eaten.
Finally! Cameron Crowe is awful. Just awful.
CancerAss to CancerAss.
Interesting. There was a woman who worked at my favorite Indian restaurant in Philadelphia who had an extra thumb. I didn't know it was so common a mutation among Indians.
I freely admit that I did not want to believe Tony was dead because I invested so much in him. The close reading seems pretty solid, though. He's dead.
Also, you can't fault Spinrad for using a plot point other writers would re-use and make into a cliche.
A nursery school rhyme from 2015, based on the early efforts of a hungry starlet with an otherworldly rack: "Amanda Peet, her teats are sweet."
Ministry of Originality (MiniOrg) would be a better headline gag, since it is in keeping with the down-is-up nature of the ministries in the book.
Throat cancer is caused by a virus—the same one as cervical cancer. Men contract it from going down on women; it's more common as a cause than smoking, I believe.
And white people have SO much to be vengeful for vis-a-vis black people.As a black guy, watching the trailer made me feel bad. Thanks, people in this thread, for making me feel better! Where's the "Welcome to Earff!" guy?
Vickie, don' do it.
The narrator who replaced Irulan was awful, as well. No, theatrical is better. Judas Booth and Alan Smithee suck.
Louis CK likes them for their comedic potential (when paired with old ladies).
Indeed—and his most vocal detractors are women. And yes, Chris Brown is to blame for his actions. But he'd be just another woman beating nobody if it weren't for his legion of (chiefly female) fans. They are ultimately responsible for these outrages—no fans, no appearences on tv or in the songs of former victims.
And may I hasten to add this: I only wish my argument was another form of the same misogyny Chris Brown exhibits. I'd get laid more often.
As opposed to yours, which boils down to "women cannot think for themselves and thus have no responsibility for their own decisions," which is empowerment?