balderstone
Baulderstone
balderstone

I have my three nephews staying with me for the weekend, and they have requested to play Dungeons and Dragons, so I'm just putting the touches on a map for that right now.

The poor guy can't even read. We can't expect him to have a strong grasp of what words mean.

I found Westworld interesting for most of its run. It wasn't until the last episode that I completely stopped caring. It turns out Dolores was never really Dolores. Her real personality was something completely different. We learn that every action Maeve was doing, including her rebellion was scripted, up until the

Yes, you are right. Wold Blitzer was the breakout star on CNN during that war, but Arthur Kent was the SCUD Stud. The mention of CNN got my wires crossed.

America decided to conquer Canada.
America fails miserably and is driven back.
Britain, while simultaneously fighting Napoleon, comes over and burns the White House to the ground.

Believe it or not, the SCUD stud was Wolf Blitzer. I really wish I was kidding.

Trump liked Rogue One. All the bad dudes died at the end. What more do you want in an evening's entertainment?

A friend of mine recently saw him on an episode of one of those "People Play D&D" shows that are hot now. He said it confirmed that Vin Diesel is exactly the kind of player we suspected he was.

Maybe this was a fraternity prank.

Oh, I do. It bothers me anyway, as I think of the people stumbling on these shows for the first time and finding them unfunny. if they need to make them shorter, it would be better just to cut out actual segments. It can make episodes seem a little nonsensical, but it's less damaging than ruining the comic timing.

I've never been able to watch The Simpsons for more than a few seconds on FXX due to them chopping the top and bottom off of every frame to letterbox it. it looks terrible.

I don't think any of the classic modules are long enough to make a modern video game. They are only made for an evening or two in the original tabletop format, and with the fast pace of a videogame, they will be done in maybe an hour.

When I picked up my copy of The Primal Order, I had them pegged as a cool company that would probably consistently make interesting fringe products on the sidelines of the hobby assuming they ever put out another product.

But he actually plays a Drow, one of the biggest red flags when someone wants to join your D&D group.

Upvoted not because Jerry is my favorite, but because I strongly agree with your spoilered comment.

I'm dubious about Fraiser reruns. I remember catching one on TV about 10 years ago. It was a favorite episode of mine, and I was happy to watch it again. However, the station that was airing it had made time for more commercials by removing the pauses between dialogue. I had seen the episode enough that it was obvious

Frasier started airing when I was around 20, so despite having been a Cheers fan, I really wasn't at a stage in my life where I was sitting at home watching sitcoms. I didn't get into the show until the late '90s, mostly watching the late night reruns.

In the early years, most certainly. What I liked about that show at the beginning was the way Sam Malone was supposedly the smooth but dumb jock, but he was actually a really smart guy with a deep understanding of people. Over the years, the writers seemed to forget that and he actually became the dumb jock. Ted

While I like quite a lot of the '80s The Twilight Zone at the time, it was more simply as its own thing. I never could quite accept it as being The Twilight Zone.

An ironically, the image Fox was trying to push of Bart was less interesting than he could be in the early episodes, so they ultimately marginalized the character even more. I think Homer was always going to be the breakout star, but I suspect Bart might have been a bigger part of it if there hadn't been a backlash