bruisedpristine
BruisedPristine
bruisedpristine

She has a well-reviewed comedy album that went to #1 on iTunes, but you are some guy in the comments section, so I'm sure you must be correct.

She's been at it for ten years an hasn't broken through. I'm not sure why she's suddenly popping up all over the place?

She's a working comedian, and you're some guy in the comments. What exactly are your qualifications for being her career adviser?

By assigning them male or female voice actors and names. Are you really arguing that cars named Sally, Flo, and Lizzie aren't differentiated from cars named Ramone, Luigi, and Fillmore in any way?

The Thing-type creature in the recent bunker episode was genuinely creepy to me, a grown-ass adult.

I still have a bunch of Garfield collections. I haven't read them in years, but I don't want to get rid of them because I loved them so much as a kid. And I still watch the holiday specials every year during the appropriate holiday seasons.

He's a jerk who uses people and then falls apart like WHOA under pressure.

Again, you are missing the forest for the trees in your obsession with the cultural markers. The speech is about how women are regarded as "cool" if they take a bunch of shit and don't make a big deal about it, and a bitch (a dumb bitch or a psycho bitch, the two terms repeated through the novel), a nag, or a shrew if

The cultural market stuff is just window dressing - the point of the Cool Girl is that she "likes every fucking thing he likes and doesn't ever complain." The not complaining is the key part. The point about the football and stuff isn't just that "liking football" is cool, it's that "never complaining about your

The Cool Girl speech isn't part of her diary, it's her explanation of the role she was playing in the diary. The "Cool Girl" act is the manipulation that she knew other people would believe.

He does win, because he gets to regard himself as the hero just for being not as bad as Amy, which is what he really wants. He even explicitly says this.

He was super creepy in the book. The scene where he shows her the room he painted in her favorite color, and the greenhouse full of her favorite flower, and she realizes…the walls aren't freshly painted, and the tulips aren't freshly planted. They've been there for a while, waiting for her. That was one of the

I think you have to add the cost of the potential hospital bill to the cost of the meal overall, though. Not to mention the new set of flaying knives you have to purchase to get to your raw deer meat, although I guess they could just borrow those from Chris Argent.

And also because Malia didn't say venison, she said deer. She wasn't eating venison in the forest, she was eating a raw freshly killed deer. That is not a nice family meal for two humans to share with a werecoyote.

But like I said before, the show has already done more than enough to establish (in previous seasons) that Scott's moral character is strong enough that he could resist any outside persuasion to become "monstrous" by killing someone to eliminate a threat. What the show is proposing to do now is introduce that

You are totally correct. I assumed you were Police Public Call Box since you were responding to my response to her, and it was only after I posted that I realized that you were a different person (which I should have realized earlier, if only because your writing styles are totally different). Sorry about that.

But we don't really see Scott struggling internally with that choice, do we? (Not like Derek did in S2 when he bit Jackson and then freaked out and abandoned him when he started reacting badly.)

But there has not been a lot of focus on screen on 1) how Scott internalizes the consequences of his mistakes, and 2) how that internalization drives his actions.

I don't think the show portrays Scott as not having flaws. Just from this season, flaws that Scott has been explicitly called on or has called himself on are: being so jealous of a freshman that he ended up landing him in the hospital; biting Liam without knowing anything about him which put Liam in danger and put

Peter talked about contracting the Desert Wolf as an assassin during his coma rant, so while it did still come out of his mouth, it wasn't during a time when he had any reason to lie. I think it'll probably be more complicated than just "she's a murderer", but it seems pretty safe to assume that she is actually a