What you guys don't understand is that this guy typed this comment out while he was having sex with a supermodel, and he is totally not a nerd at all, but is a really cool dude who everybody likes.
What you guys don't understand is that this guy typed this comment out while he was having sex with a supermodel, and he is totally not a nerd at all, but is a really cool dude who everybody likes.
Z was nodding because he was one of the proprietors of The Wire, another bar that got snubbed, because black bars don't win awards.
Todd's awkward reaction to Walt's pain struck me as genuine discomfort. The first wake I ever attended was for a high school classmate who died in a motocross accident, and the only words I managed to awkwardly blurt out to the grieving family before hurriedly leaving the overwhelmingly sad scene were exactly the…
Sorry Janine, but you're wrong. The glorification of violence as a concept was invented by Activision in 2003 to sell videogame software. Prior to that year, all humans detested violence and revered all human life as sacred, and no one ever had violent fantasies about hurting people they didn't like.
"Sexist" doesn't equal "misogynist" on the internet. There are plenty of MRA shitheads on the internet. In fact, I'm pretty sure that the internet echo-chamber is literally the only place in the entire universe where those shitheads can delude themselves into believing that their bullshit matters at all.
Also, there probably are exceptions to kidnapping laws. For instance,
I'd imagine that if the parents are presenting a clear and immediate
danger to their child (say, threatening the child with an axe or
something), I bet taking the kid away from them wouldn't be considered
kidnapping. No, that wasn't Marie's…
Your insane belief that kidnapping is a federal capital offense prompted me to do a little bit of research. It turns out that the Lindbergh kidnapping inspired a bunch of new state laws in addition to the Federal Kidnapping Act, which were known as the "Little Lindbergh" laws. In some states, these laws made…
The mark of a true subhuman piece of shit is the idiotic belief that the expectation of politeness is equivalent to oppression.
The mark of a true subhuman piece of shit is the idiotic belief that the expectation of politeness is equivalent to oppression.
"Right, they needed to be exterminated."
"Right, they needed to be exterminated."
Does that calm you down??
Does that calm you down??
The only other minor retcon I can think of is that I suspect that Pop-Pop had originally been conceived as Dennis and Dee's paternal grandfather (Pop-Pop was angry at their father for never having told Dennis and Dee about his history with the Nazis, not at their mother) which had to be retconned when they introduced…
The only other minor retcon I can think of is that I suspect that Pop-Pop had originally been conceived as Dennis and Dee's paternal grandfather (Pop-Pop was angry at their father for never having told Dennis and Dee about his history with the Nazis, not at their mother) which had to be retconned when they introduced…
I thought the key line in Charlie's teardown was when he said that "[a quality woman] doesn't say yes right away, she says no for years, like ten years. That's what a real woman does."
I thought the key line in Charlie's teardown was when he said that "[a quality woman] doesn't say yes right away, she says no for years, like ten years. That's what a real woman does."
It was Charlie who kidnapped the restaurant critic, Roger Corman, in "Paddy's Pub: The Worst Bar in Philadelphia." While the rest of the gang tried to defuse the situation and treat Corman humanely, Charlie suggested that they "roll him up in a rug," "let him piss in his pants," and ultimately smashed him over the…
It was Charlie who kidnapped the restaurant critic, Roger Corman, in "Paddy's Pub: The Worst Bar in Philadelphia." While the rest of the gang tried to defuse the situation and treat Corman humanely, Charlie suggested that they "roll him up in a rug," "let him piss in his pants," and ultimately smashed him over the…
I don't know, I thought the scene just served to reflect the undercurrent of extreme ambiguity that ran through the entire episode. He didn't pull his daughter aside and explain to her what she'd done wrong because he wasn't even sure if she'd actually done anything wrong. Likewise, Louie was still halfheartedly…