comradepig--disqus
ComradePig
comradepig--disqus

The GUTS host went to my alma mater. Truly the greatest of all honors.

Once Upon a Time in Anatolia: An unconventional Turkish drama chronicling the final hours of a police homicide investigation. The visually striking film makes great use of the ancient, windswept landscape of rural Turkey to communicate and inform the sparse existence and inner lives of the central characters.

But please, just let the Jews be for once!

Many even. On his bed-stand.

So they're rebooting Overboard?

The title of this movie makes it almost impossible for me to take it seriously. It could be a great movie for all I know (not that the description above gives me that indication), but the subject matter combined with the name places it just barely outside the realm of "Tropic Thunder parody trailer".

Bit of a Kunt.

The East German pairs all use dong-roids, it's a travesty!

The same reason that battle robots have giant knives in Avatar. Because they can.

Japanese nationalism….in SPAAAAAAAAAAAACE.

When the site was down for maintenance a few nights ago I hoped in vain that maybe they were instituting pagination. But, alas it was not to be.

Doesn't this sort of thing just mush into "vague stuff that happened roughly between 2-5 years old" for anyone else or do I just have the memory of an old person?

To be fair, that is the punishment you bear for voluntarily watching Let's Go to Prison.

Soon being relative of course, in TI time that means some months from now.

One of the best and certainly most humorous encapsulations of all this for me remains the People's Front scene from Life of Brian.

In the 1960s and 1970s in particular, the Palestinian resistance movement and many other colonial independence groups tended to orient themselves toward a relatively secular Marxist-Leninist orientation. Carlos for example, worked primarily for the PLFP, which falls under the larger PLO umbrella. The PLO itself is…

It's good to know that in the darkness of the post-apocalypse hairdressers will still be employable.

Carlos-Parts 1&2:
The majority of my pop-culture weekend was spent watching Oliver Assayas lengthy mini-series 'Carlos' as a thematic continuation of last weekend's The Baader-Meinhoff Complex, the series examines the career of the (in)famous left-wing terrorist known popularly 'Carlos the Jackal'.

The most surprising part to me is that said trick still works.

Unfortunately as @Dikachu:disqus states elsewhere in the thread, many Tea-Party figures like Yelton are so deep in their own echo chambers that even losing their jobs probably won't make them reassess their views.