catastrophicallycharismatic
NewlyInadequate
catastrophicallycharismatic

Speak for yourself.  I’m not paying $30 for a stream of that or anything else for that matter.  That’s a wild ripoff, especially for single people like myself.

Is it accurate to refer to Montrose’s lover and the other ball participants as “trans women,” or is that imposing a modern understanding on a historical phenomenon that wasn’t quite so clear cut? I’m not an expert on ball culture, by any means, but my understanding is that for some participants it was more about expres

I feel like it doesn’t have enough characters for a never ending mystery box. The show thus far has been hyper focused on its leads. It hasn’t given any indication that it’s going to branch out and explore the lives of anyone else. And even if it wanted to, I’m not sure it could as the two factions are very small.

I’m alone in this, but I remember liking Salvation, especially the first half. I get why people say the movie is boring and unmemorable, but it hit a post-apocalyptic robot war spot for me that very few movies have pulled off. And it didn’t spend all this time explaining the set-up, which bugs me about every other Term

A “darker” cut you say! Great idea, I always said the movie’s big problem was how it was too full of lighthearted hijinks and an overreliance on comic relief.

Tempest says the rapist was scheduled for execution though, so his crime was already known.

Note to your note: I believe the highest ranking official stated that the Mithraic created the necromancers. She’s basically a terminator reprogrammed to help the resistance.

Would regular ol’ antibiotics help with radiation poisoning?

FINALLLLYYYYYY

Honestly, I just want to play the games. I’m not a console or PC loyalist. Microsoft understands people like me and wants to make their games as accessible as possible to a wide audience.

I think it is a bit of head-fake. Ya, Ennis (that is his name, not Ellis, as eloquently highlighted by the Denver mining secretary as “one letter from penis”) is an instrumentality but the “big confession on the stand” that is the hallmark of Perry Mason will show who is the true big bad.

Yeah, I read “the queer only once” as flipping the accusation to make the accuser uncomfortable. 

I dunno. I think there’s something profoundly interesting about someone who starts out a flawed man and cheat but ultimately turns into someone who ends up fully committing to being an ethical lawyer who fights injustice...something which I hope he does.

The way they got Perry into law was incredibly elegant. For one, I thought it would take more than it did. Nope, Della just forged a letter and boom, he’s got the academic/work background in place. But having Hamilton Burger be the one to help Perry Mason, who goes on to become this paragon of law and his eventual

Man, this episode felt like a triumph. This has been a pretty downbeat series so far, with the heroes just encountering one dead end after another. But this pays off so much of all that. This ep was pretty much all Rylance, but I really loved Shea Whigham’s little moment where Pete surprises Perry by offering to keep

“We’re proud to announce our newly named team ... The Washington Lady As!”

You didn’t actually have to have a law degree to become a lawyer all the way up into the 1960s. You could just take the bar exam and if you passed you were in.

So after last night’s episode I think I see where this is going: John Lithgow’s character is going to die and Perry will have to take over the case, thus finding his true purpose as a lawyer.

Oh boy, this is out there, but how *sure* are we that that body was in fact the kidnapped kid?  What if this is all a plot involving the church involving a body swap, and the real kidnapped kid will reappear so Sister Alice can look like she actually worked a miracle.