avclub-f121d09285898f1c66d66f1e6f0455a6--disqus
Gary X
avclub-f121d09285898f1c66d66f1e6f0455a6--disqus

Thank you, The Killi

It's 7 months later, and you likely don't even remember this question. It appears likely, however, that Frank does consider Russo might come clean when, before pulling the trigger, Frank asks if he's told anyone the truth about what happened with the Secretary of State. If he had, his truth telling would have had more

Well, there's quite a few of them in New York who are actually like this or, at least, desperately want to be.

Repeating yourself is almost always necessary and good and healthy in art at some point. Lots of artists repeat themes, narratives, and techniques because they learn and build from the previous attempt. Art and the process involved in making it can be incredibly iterative. Of course, maybe the artists finds nothing

Amusingly and somewhat related, a coworker sent me a thing on Reddit from today (or yesterday? I don't know) where someone was asking for advice because he and his wife felt that with Blockbuster finally gone, it was time for them to set up a Mom and Pop rental store.

Also, Nolan's stuff has a lot of humor in it. I've never thought of it before, but I do think they could make a great collaboration and maybe balance out each other's excesses.

I really don't understand the dislike for the design there. It's good, I think. Except for the running "newsreel" thing over the photos. That looks like a geocities move.

Agreed. It's an example of the "flatter" designs @avclub-77ae1a5da3b68dc65a9d1648242a29a7:disqus mentions up above, but it's done very well.

Really? That's one of my favorite things about new websites. I like being able to jump to other stuff quickly rather than having to scroll around or go to something like "Feature Jump" which is, frankly, a mess. I really like the one over at Polygon. It remains small and unobtrusive, but it expands out when you hover

Man, the "Worst Announcement" category this year is going to be fucking stacked.

Wow. That guy straight up kicks the cat into the ceiling at the end of it.

I haven't seen that, but it sounds hilarious.

It already has for some.

Agreed. I also read it a bit before I tackled Kierkegaard's Either/Or and some of his other works, which touch on the same thing (especially in the former). It's really guided how I've thought about culture, not just the kind with pop in front of it, as well, and I think it's a concern that man has had for awhile. The

I mention it a lot, but this is something DFW starts to get at in his essay on television (and also in Infinite Jest in some ways).

Also nostalgia is pretty existentially self-destructive from a philosophical point of view, but no one ever wants to have that argument anymore whe—OH MY GOD, I TOTALLY FORGOT ABOUT FRENCH TOAST CRUNCH, YESSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS!!!!

I watched it when I was a kid. I'm about to be 25. I'm the prime age for the Space Jam nostalgia train.

Did VH1 buy the website?

It's apparently computer animated though there is a live action part. It's mentioned here: http://forums.cgsociety.org… But none of the stuff from the trailers is from that sequence.