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    In “Legend of Zelda” the elf you play as is not actually named Zelda, but Link. 

    Surprised not to see Dennis Janke? Wasn’t he still inking Man of Steel at that time? 

    I have a question maybe the community can help with that I asked over in another post. Do people have a sense of where MCU is headed for the overarching next arc? Is it headed to one? I feel like almost everyone knew in Phase I we were getting Infinity War and it felt really well thought out and cohesive.

    I think there are probably not too many people still engaging with this post anymore, but I do have a question. Do we have any good sense of what the next big continuity story is going to be about, specifically, yet? I mean, I get that we are, like, ALL about the multiverse in Phase IV (V?). That’s awesome. But aside

    I really enjoyed it. I think a lot of what I’ve been hearing/seeing in reactions make sense to me even though I don’t necessarily agree with them. The teens, who I have really started to enjoy getting reactions from, thought they liked it but seemed confused. 17, in particular, couldn’t quite put his finger on what

    It takes me the same amount of time to choose something and correctly use it from my pouch, but this sounds cool, too.

    Just a note: I have definitely found two outfits in chests; the kind you have to pry open. Not sure but I believe they were both in hidden areas you unlock with a tool you get near the end of Act I. Could be wrong about that, though. 

    Finally watched last night. I agree with some of the comments, but I also wanted to point out we as viewers really can’t say what happened with Ruby. It is entirely likely within the context of the relationships of the show that she *willingly* told Christina everything as a co-conspirator because she loves her; and

    Me too, although I was pretty on board with the Haunted Boarding House as well. Episode 5 (“Strange Case,” where Ruby “passes” at Marshall Fields’) is the one that really locked me in. 

    TRT-X, I went into this show with zero expectations: I hadn’t read the book and I knew next to nothing about it except for that it appeared interested in a) discussions about racism and Lovecraft; and b) monsters, both of which are subjects I am interested in as well.

    Huh.

    I think it’s pretty important to remember Dreyfus’s Roy does not, at all, reflect the picture of masculinity that was prevalent in the 70s. Having the white male hero cry in the shower and get more or less symbolically rejected by his sons is a pretty dramatic subversive depiction of fatherhood for Spielberg, let

    I was positive... POSITIVE, that Ruby was going to be found a bloody mess in Mrs. Davenport’s clothes and arrested. Heck, I’m still sort of positive. Did she wash the bloody prints off the service elevator?

    I just wanted to say I too found it so surprising to see so much actually happen in the first two episodes. I haven’t read the book and don’t intend to until after the season, but I’m also accustomed to the HBO model like Watchmen and Westworld where the layers of story-onion really don’t get pulled back until eps.

    Wait there’s cookies?

    Jesus Christ. Is every old white politician from New York a racist?

    So I’ve been tweeting half-heartedly for some time that a third movie could be easily done as an anthology with different directors tackling the three (four?) “Derry Interludes” that Mike Hanlon describes in the book between its major sections: The Bradley Gang, the Black Spot, the Ironworks, and the weird one about

    Yes and no. The book switches back and forth between generations (1958 to 1985) in fairly consistently decreasing sections of text so that in the beginning you get an entire Part, or selections of chapters, focused on one era; then halfway through, it’s something like chapter to chapter (within a Part). By the time

    Seems weird that they’re ripping off Prime so blatantly. 

    I had no idea Ivanka Trump was a copywriter for Kia. Things must be really troubling over there.