broccolitoon
Brock Tune
broccolitoon

That would probably cost a fortune, if they're smart shoppers they'll just dig around in garage sales. Another man's garbage…

I'm confused by what Drew Fortune is even describing, because it doesn't seem to be the ending of Friday Night Lights.

This is actually real. In its defense it plays on the screen a bit better than it reads (a BIT better, I love Adam Scott, but as an actor and as his character the lines just don't sound quite right from him). I think they were trying to make their big romantic speech at the end less cliche than your standard rom-com,

I'VE HAD IT WITH THESE MOTHER FUCKING CLONES, IN MY MOTHER FUCKING WARS!!!

I can't even watch those camera bits on the last episode (though to be honest I can't rewatch those last seasons in general). But its genuinely embarrassing to imagine writers sitting down and envisioning different ways they're going to have their characters sit down and talk about how great the show is.

Thanks!

Gotta disagree on West Wing and Frasier.I never watched West Wing beyond season 4 (the idea of Sorkin-less West Wing never appealed to me), but just watching that clip I have a hard time finding anything to fault there, seems like a nice, perfect little ending. And on Frasier, I loved that ending, the thing to

This wasn't even close to being the last line (the last scene didn't even take place in Texas!). I don't think this line was even in the last episode, nor would I call it a "marquee cathphrase" (I only remember it as something Riggins would say when he was drunk). I'm wondering what the author is thinking of here?

There are some clips in there featuring what looks like maybe a female forest spirit? What movie is that from I don't recognize it? The animation seems a bit more Miyazaki than Disney.

Yes its very interesting, a lot of people are begrudging it as kind of a lazy way of ending Betty's storyline and leaving it there, without really noting that it is, possibly, a tremendous impact story wise on our main character.

Books?! Well hello to you, you New York intellectual liberal snob.

Y is hardly the first, or the only, post-apocalypse story to feature survivors orbiting in space. World War Z and Day After Tomorrow come to mind (they may have been before or after Y, I'm not sure where in Y's publication history that particular story arc came about). The novel Lucifer's Hammer also has a bit about

"I gotta be honest Carol, I feel like you're making a big mistake here"

I agree the show hasn't done much to really create a Phil-Carol bond, but the one thing I DO buy about the ending isn't so much that Phil and Carol are star-crossed lovers, but that Carol doesn't want to be with a group that's willing to cast someone off in the desert.

I was more confused by the plan because asteroids cause planet extinction due to size AND speed, asteroids/meteors hit the planet at 30,000 mph. While dropping a big rock would have consequences, would it still be planet-wide effects? No matter how high its dropped from?

I kind of thought Ultron was going to be the perfect fit for not having to do this. When I initially heard the idea, of Ultron taking over Stark's technology, I thought we would be getting the Avengers vs Ultron and a small number of Stark's already created robots vs the Avengers. I think it would have been a fun idea

I liked it, but I do kind of wish Whedon had done something more interesting than just repeating the heroes vs. disposable horde of CGI baddies from the first flick. But there's still lots to enjoy about the flick, I liked it more than the first, but hope the next time one of these rolls around they're doing something

It's too bad the Nolan continuity is done. My first reaction to this is it'd be kind of perfect as a joker-villain who was inspired by Ledger's Joker.

I know its just silly fun, but it still bothers me that they don't reveal the other answers that remain, I wanna know!