Little known fact: Trump was a roommate of Ned Ryerson in college. You know, Needlehead Ned, Ned the Head…bing!
Little known fact: Trump was a roommate of Ned Ryerson in college. You know, Needlehead Ned, Ned the Head…bing!
That's sort of what's happening now in the comic, so I would guess they are on their way there in the show as well.
They aren't extinct, but they aren't exactly common anymore, either. There are only ten still operating in Michigan, which is more than I thought there were, but still only a tiny percentage of how many theaters there are overall.
He looks like a Tick villain.
I can't fucking believe no one has used this in a story yet.
Right, by the time he used his power on those guys, he meant to do it. He didn't mean or didn't realize what exactly was going to happen when he told the Sheriff to go fuck himself.
Yeah, he knew, but only sort-of. He didn't know it was going to happen literally! That was in like issue #3, and was also the incident that taught him just how literally the Word is taken by people.
It's not illustrated; Jesse tells him to do it, then they show him sitting in the ambulance after the fact. He then tells Arseface to get him his gunbelt, he does, then he shoots himself. I just re-read it yesterday!
What's wrong with telling your kid to be good because there are too many bad people in the world already? Seems like a fairly positive message. I mean, it's better than "if you ain't first, you're last," isn't it?
Tell your old man to try dragging Walton and Lanier up and down the court every night.
Ironically, the "I am Jack" stuff wasn't even in the fucking book, it was totally written for the movie as a narrative device.
What does being dead have to do with people's opinions of his writing? Does his dying preclude you somehow from gaining this knowledge? His writing lives on, does it not?
I loved Pygmy. I thought it was hilarious.
I listened to a promo of their first album when I worked at an indie record store in 1994. My reaction was "meh." Don't think I ever bothered to listen to the second album.
That was "Zorn," not "porn."
Well, I never heard of them before this and I pretty much exclusively listen to obscure music, so I guess it sort of worked? I still wasn't interested enough to listen to their music, though.
Wish I would have thought of that joke. So obvious but so perfect. Well done, sir.
Wow, that's a deep cut right there. You don't see Throw Momma From The Train references every day.
I had already forgotten about Radiohead until this latest publicity stunt. I think their strategy is backfiring.
This album went gold, I'm pretty sure. It's their last album that was regrettably overlooked, because it was their most ambitious and best work, in my opinion.