blazemiskulin
Blaze Miskulin
blazemiskulin

In the article (I just opened it in a “guest” session), there is a giant animated gif at the top, a slideshow on the side, multiple small animated gifs along the side and at the bottom, and an auto-play video from Gizmodo.

Thank you. But, to be honest, if I was motivated enough, I could have googled the name of the series and eventually found it.

Your story seems to be missing a rather important detail: Where do I go to watch this? I see a link to Penny Arcade, and a link to Facebook. Neither of those is, to my knowledge, a place where one goes to watch web-series.

Mega-stars for the Hudson Hawk reference.

No.

Just a pedantic point about the English language: If something is “shot toward Earth”, it must have originated outside of, or away from, the planet called “Earth”.

But you know Groot and Rocket are played by two really expensive actors?

But... what if someone actually is a cuckold in a servile role in a D/s relationship?

No shit. It looked like ass.

What dangling threads? It’s been a while since I last watched Agent Carter, but I don’t remember any dangling threads.

Picking at nits....

Yep.

I’m curious. What would you consider an “appropriate display of [racial] diversity”?

{Throws a Nerf ball at the Doctor}

When I was in university, I had the opportunity to sit down and talk with William Windon. He was a great person[1] as well as a great actor. But one of the things I thought was funny was that he hated having been in that episode. He was almost angry about how often he got asked about it (callback to that SNL skit with

They have fishermen. Fish are made of meat (unless it’s Lent and you’re Catholic).

It makes absolutely no sense that she would go into battle with her cleavage exposed because that’s the sort of physical vulnerability that would quickly get a person killed.

Also 50% of life does that include Animals and plants? Or is it just sentient [sic] beings?

Because it’s two separate and complete stories—one of which happens after the other—rather than a single story which stops half-way through, and then continues.