bob11125555
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bob11125555

There are no countries. There are only 5 companies that run everything,
Haliburton, The Bilderberg group, Bechtel, Lockheed-Martin, Midroll
Media.

You don't think that his girlfriend was being 100% genuine every time she half-heartedly told him to stop doing something that wasn't dangerous at all and was going to make them a lot of money?

Even though I'm a #DavidDawg, I'm pretty excited about Griffin Newman as Arthur. I hope he can teach The Tick about the chronology of the Fast and the Furious franchise. #TheTwoFriends

I was pretty down on secret wars around issue 7 or 8, but I think the conclusion salvages a lot of it. The middle part is still pretty messy, there were like 4 or 5 too many raft survivors (the Maker, Black Swan, Captain Marvel, Star Lord, Thanos all felt pretty wasted), there was a bunch of stuff that happened

It doesn't help that the Hand isn't ever really super coherent just on a plot level.

I think the only thing in Slott's run that you wouldn't necessarily pick up from just reading Silk is that one of Silk's spider-powers is that she has the uncontrollable urge to fuck spider-man (it is literally one of the powers she got from being bitten by the spider). Not reading her introduction in ASM is a pretty

American Crime Story has ensured that whenever I see John Travolta in anything, I'll be disappointed that he's not doing his really thirsty vaguely southern lizard person accent that he's chosen to do on that show.

I vaguely remember a lot of III being about how the assassins and templars are pretty much the same thing. There's a big segment where Kenway and Connor team up, and in the end it turns out that the founding fathers were the real threat to Connor's tribe and Kenway and the non-crazy templars were trying to protect

Trees is firmly in the popular Image comics genre of books that feel like they were written in an attempt to get a development deal with a prestige cable network. It's an ok book, but it also feels like it's stories are constantly asking the question "wouldn't it be cool if this was a tv shows that offered a gritty,

That brick that took down newspaper spider-man that one time is definitely spider-man's most underrated foe.

The second comment on an interview with Kenya Barris I read about this episode was someone complaining about their black neighbors.

Yes.

I feel like he was never the best at plotting or pacing and at some point he pretty much completely lost the thread, probably from some combination of rustiness, the alien/conspiracy stuff running out of steam, buying into his own hype, and not having watched tv since like the original
Kolchak was cancelled.

He's the point of view character in Priest's Black Panther run. I honestly don't remember him showing up in anything besides that (and subsequent black panther books).

Remember when Fox decided that what the great Human Target title sequence needed was a terrible guitar riff instead of the great orchestral theme. It was an even stronger signal than introducing a character literally named Poochie that the retooling had ruined the show.

According to a review on another site, the show thinks the biggest political blunders are "Rod Blagojevich, Herman Cain, Eliot Spitzer, Larry Craig, Christine O'Donnell and Dick Cheney."

The structure of maybe 75% of flash episodes has been

I guess the combination of it being slightly easier to post + your comment showing up on the facebook feeds of all your racist and sexist friends more than makes up for the people you are losing by making posts less anonymous.

But the role of timing isn't huge in Daily Fantasy, right (I genuinely only sort of know the rules)?

It feels like they really underestimated how different the uber-esq strategy of becoming ubiquitous quickly and hoping it pressures regulators into relaxing regulations would work in a market where a lot of people think the service you are providing genuinely shouldn't exist.