chucke99
Chuck E.
chucke99

I’ve begun to tire of “Game of Thrones in Space” (which might be redundant) plots. Yes, there are space ships, and planets, and battles, but things et bogged down in politics. I just finished John Scalzi’s Collapsing Empire, and while I really enjoyed it, I am disappointed that it is the setup for a long series of

Videodrome did quite a number on my skull when I first watched it on VCR back in the eighties. I may have been tripping balls on mushrooms at the time.

I haven’t watched the series, but really enjoyed the first Wayward novel, and liked the second one. I can’t seem to work up the energy to read the final installment, though. I’m aware of some major plot differences between the show and the books (which I get, because TV needs to tighten up story lines) but I

Replying to myself, but in the category of apocalypses I can now place The Leftovers as one of my favorite tv serials evah.

I read Congo about ten years ago. It was quaint how the author described the most powerful laptop in earth as having megabytes of memory and like one gig of hard drive.

I was amazed that this movie came out to less-than-steller reviews and seemed to tank at the box office. When I watched it (on demand) I instantly loved it. It’s a real classic. (And also, please don’t make a sequel. I realize they already are.)

My anime-addicted daughter loves Hunter x Hunter.

I am all, “Shut the fuck up, Bernie,” these days. If he wants to be a Democrat and work to get them elected, he needs to join the fucking party and put in time raising money for candidates other than his chosen few special cases (who can’t seem to win at all).

Space exploration/habitation as a not-well-thought-out idea. Two of my favorite sci-fi novels lately have been Aurora and Seveneves. Also, post apocalypses with some variation, like Black Moon (which should totally be a series, like The Walking Dead). Spoilers For Black Moon in the next paragraph, since it may not be

One translator accidentally was given two words from the joke and was hospitalized for a month.

One of the staunchest Berners from my old legislative district (who would have voted to unendorse Hillary during the general election if the pro-Clinton side hadn’t gotten its shit together and blocked the motion), who literally crowed about being a Berniecrat and offering write-in progressives against every Democrat

Yes, and the youngest two (now 18 and 20) were in the kid-zone for the first Cars movie (2006), but I just refused to watch it. We do have the DVD, I believe.

The Berner numbers are getting smaller and smaller every day. Hence the anger density is increasing.

The Berners (Never Hillary crowd) are beginning to lose their steam in the Democratic party, and are getting angeier and angrier at Clinton as a result. Their whole narrative about how we should have picked Bernie instead has evaporated with the acknowledgment that the Comey memo did the dirty deed after a year’s

Obama proves the “system is rigged” charge is a lie. Clinton was the favorite in 2008 too. Just because the preferred candidate actually wins does not mean the primaries were rigged to make it happen. This time around, Clinton was the best Democratic candidate. You can’t rig a 4 million vote lead.

Everett, Washington is home to Boeing’s 777 plant (largest building in the world, etc.).

In other words, she has the skills (and job history) of a The Apprentice TV show winner. No wonder Trump likes her. (I genuinely expected a line in the story saying she had been on the show.)

They would have questioned Clinton’s mental capacity and fitness to lead.

Fact 1: they are still raking Hillary over frigid embers.

I want 20 million or so registered Democrats to hold primaries in every state in the Union, and then I want to fully support the person who wins the nomination, regardless of gender, race or religious perspective.