coatituesday--disqus
Coati Tuesday
coatituesday--disqus

All this Sony/Marvel stuff doesn't concern me. I just can't wait till the next Spidey movie pits him against The Gibbon.
Or The Kangaroo.

I'll go ahead and disagree on that, respectfully-ish.
Fevre Dream got a whole ton of antebellum Mississippi stuff right, and Louisiana has never been used better as a vampire setting.
Yes, I include the Anne Rice books in that reckoning because my goodness they're horrible. Respectfully-ish.

Pshh. It's "the Fevre Dream guy" for me.

Chilly Scenes of Winter is a wonderful movie - as I recall. He was a good character actor obviously but a fine romantic lead too.

— nor the money to come up with Gargoyle style makeup. (It was Gargoyle right? Isaac someone?)

Oh, yeah, I know it's old. In fact that was the other weird thing - still in print after all this time?

Hell… or if Bob Kane showed up in a BATMAN movie….

I don't mind Stan Lee's grandstanding, especially as he's recently inclined to give more credit than he used to to Kirby and Ditko etc.
But I was in an arts and crafts store just yesterday, and there's a book by Stan Lee about How to Draw Marvel Superheroes. The ONE guy at Marvel who doesn't draw…

Wait, are they saying that women doctors in general should be paid what male doctors make? That can't be right!
I mean, okay if it's a time traveling doctor job, but not you know, emergency room surgery or something. Girls take so long to get ready!

I haven't heard of the song but I've heard of Fonsi. I think it was spelled differently though.

I can accept people, even educated people, a few hundred 200 years ago, believing in the hollow earth thing. If you think about what was known and unknown about the natural world in general back then it's understandable.
Jefferson, apparently, wasn't sure Lewis and Clark might not find woolly mammoths.
But

I for one am glad the hollow earth theory exists, because it gave the world the incredible story "Black as the Pit, From Pole to Pole" by Howard Waldrop and Steven Utley.
You've got the Frankenstein monster (hey, the article above even mentions the year 1818), not exactly gone as we thought at the end of the book.

I'll confess right now I don't remember how they handled That Scene in the tv movie of It. In this upcoming version…if it's like the book people will be creeped out, whether they've read it or not. If it's not like the book, someone in the audience will yell out "why aren't they all fucking her???!" and people who

So am I, but no one gives ME a break.

In a Vonnegut novel, a character mentions the notion that in the old days, gravity was variable. That is, if you want to build a pyramid in ancient Egypt, you just have to wait for a light day, and move all the stones then.

My alternative history ideas are a bit less earth shaking.
For instance, I wrote a treatment where Friends only went 9 seasons, and one where Steve Jobs died in 2010, not 2011, and one where George Lucas went to UCLA instead of USC.
Can't seem to get any movie studios interested, but I think it's all in who you know.

Not much of a DC fan - or a reader I guess - I thought that said parade moms in the article.

As I recall from the trial days, that depends on the photographer,

On the one hand I have admired McCain's political statements, which are even handed and fair and often oppose the Trump agenda.
On the other hand he's voted, in every instance I know, for Trump and his literally anti-American policies.

I know just one thing about Ryan Seacrest - he ends his shows with "Seacrest out."