azudarko--disqus
azudarko
azudarko--disqus

"yet she's desired by every man she meets."

The scene comes after she's basically been begging her parents to keep paying for her shit, after she's been out of college for two years. How she's going to be the most important writer out there when she genuinely has no idea how to the world even works. It so obviously a joke at her expense - I have no clue how

I felt like the line singled out in this week's review really summarized not just Fran's view on Hannah, but the show's as a whole:

I really, really like Ellis and I'll make sure to check that article out. I hope she does more stuff.

I consider Steven Universe one of the most perfect shows on television, and even I'm there with you. I really don't want this show to turn into a Venture Bros situation - where I've just given up on watching it because I lose all steam during the massive, terrible breaks between new content.

He does at least appear in the video!

It's called Bedfellows. I looked it up based on your description.

And that movie is -way- worse than an 87.

Right?

And therein lies my issue with the show thusfar.

Like I said - just because he's the originator of the trope (well, not really, but he certainly made it more famous), doesn't make him any more interesting than those that came after him.

I think calling the Punisher "interesting" is a big freakin' stretch. Just because he's the grandfather of basically every triple-A video game protagonist (not made by Nintendo) in the past ten years, doesn't make him any more interesting than those same characters. Blah blah white dude blah blah murdered family blah

Yeah, skipping this episode. Wake me up when Ahsoka does a thing.

Unfair? Life is unfair! Why should death be any different?

Didn't the possessed guy explicitly state last episode that Eliza was Jane?

Continuing the SPOILER train.

I've had this argument on the AVclub twice now, but it's worth saying it again - I genuinely couldn't agree less. Brotherhood has a few characters that the early-2000s adaptation misses out on - but is ultimately a much more traditional, much duller anime about fighting. Its villains are stock anime tropes, its themes

100% agree on everything here. Mystery Incorporated is that rare adaptation that is so much more insightful, affectionate, and well-crafted than basically any other entry into its franchise that it gave me affection for the property that I never would have had before - or, at least, on a level I would never have had

That game had some amazingly satisfying moments. Taking out three of the big, bald motherfuckers by sliding into one to knock out his legs, coming up to uppercut the second clear across the room, then pivoting to hadoken the last into tiny little bits? Soooo satisfying.

I'm gonna be real, I'm legitimately surprised that you can even beat that game. I always just assumed it was one of those buggy games that was impossible to actually finish.