besbev--disqus
kerys
besbev--disqus

He did another tour of the show in Italy several months ago (you can find some of it on youtube), and he's still amazing at 71.

She gave me my first conscious hints of my own bisexuality, so I'll have to beg to differ. ;)

I think that your theory is titular canon.

There's no reason that you can't live in a van and look like that, so long as you have the means to obtain toiletries, cosmetics, and clothes. I lived out of my car for a couple of months, and no one at work even knew it. You can shower at any gym (many of which offer free trial memberships), most truck stops, and

but… taste the rainbow

Tell that to Ward.

That character's name is Fin, short for Odafin Tutuola. I wouldn't have corrected you, but I can never pass up the opportunity to share the most amazing name in television. Also, the character's son is gay, giving him a pretty good reason to be familiar with that particular slang usage.

I'm not an officer or a history major, but I could name dozens of leaders (infamous and otherwise) from throughout the past two and a half millennia.

Admittedly, I only have a single high school creative writing class (taken over 20 years ago) to back up my claim, but I was taught about anti-heroes being more in line with the definition that I quoted. For instance, we discussed Scarlett O'Hara, Roland Deschain, and Sam Spade when discussing anti-heroes, and they're

Perhaps there's a more academic definition of the term than that with which I am familiar, but I certainly believe that Don Draper fit's Merriam-Webster's definition: "a main character in a book, play, movie, etc., who does not have the usual good qualities that are expected in a hero"

There's a man, too. He was standing with a few other men that Rick greeted when he went out to talk to Jesse.

SWORD premiered in Astonishing X-Men, so they're likely a Fox property.

I had hoped that Bobbi and Mack would be working for SWORD, but I think Fox owns the rights to them, since they debuted in Astonishing X-Men.

In the comics, he's from the fictional Eastern European country of Transia, which is between Romania and Serbia.
ETA: Of course, other commenters have answered this. I didn't read down far enough.

There's no accounting for taste. ;)

I certainly don't think that she should suddenly (or EVER) become romantically interested in him. But criticizing the character (your original post didn't mention the actor) as "a mumbling Rain Man knock-off" is dismissive of autistic savants and of sufferers of brain damage (the latter of whom include myself in their

I want to like for the first half of your sentence and dislike for the second half.

After a traumatic brain injury, I had fairly severe word salad for months. Nearly ten years later, I still have spells of it at times, and I have been fully independent throughout, except for three days of hospitalization for major depressive disorder.

For the first several months after my TBI, I sounded a great deal like this. It's been nearly a decade now and I still sometimes slip into those speech patterns when the words that I want slip away.

Oh, I read it as sarcastic… and hyperbolic, and dismissive of Cyrano's complaint. Which is why I pointed out that Cyrano's complaint could have been easily addressed onscreen without eating any more screen time or taking away from the episode.