I mean they're definitely not RT or anything, and do still do some valuable reporting here and there, but you have to sort of learn to avoid their stuff on certain issues/areas.
I mean they're definitely not RT or anything, and do still do some valuable reporting here and there, but you have to sort of learn to avoid their stuff on certain issues/areas.
Al-Jazeera America certainly made a fairly convincing but noticeably incomplete venture into the realm of respectability for a few years, but I think that has pretty much run its course at this point.
Most of the worst pejorative stereotypes of Americans in Russia date basically from the days of 1990s and early 2000s when a certain brand of Western business person/tourist traveled to the country almost exclusively to do shit like the above.
Although it was also the series critical high-point, I feel like Modern Warfare 2 is definitely where it all begin to go off the rails a bit.
I've never really been able to jump on the Steven Universe, Adventure Time and so on train as well.
I have to admit whenever I see anything about Scandal, I do end up associating a little it with Suey Park of #CancelColbert saying something in the line of "Well, I do like activism but I mean not enough to miss an episode of Scandal over it."
I watch a lot of anime but Death Note is not my particularly cup of tea, it's a very grandiose and very gothic horror-thriller tale, but also incredibly self-serious despite being more than a little silly. It has a lot of fans but as an entry point I wouldn't recommend it.
Ramming enemy trucks off scenic mountain peaks upon my elephant steed does indeed warm even this jaded heart.
This weekend I'll largely be continuing to burn on through Far Cry 4 and will probably wrap up the main storyline.
Tokyo absolutely, but Kyoto was actually left (relatively speaking here) unscathed by bombing thanks mostly to the intervention of some in the White House and other sections of the government that recognized its cultural/historical and architectural value and sought to protect it.
"They confused a different body for his"
According to the Village Voice review, he also manages to summon up an earthquake when he's getting bullied. I think I missed the part of my theological studies where they covered the "have faith; receive dank super-powers" part of religion.
I'm so confused. So does he somehow guide the entire A-bomb program? Or is it implied that he wished to god that it would be developed and god was all "I'll get some top men on it"?
Official forums in general tend to be pretty dire, namely there are always that collection of unyielding traditionalists who'll flip ten thousand shits over even the slightest change of design from the original game to its sequel or successor, no matter how small or how necessary that change might be.
I'm not sure if it's widely available but Dog Alley is a fairly weird, but pretty interesting late-20s Soviet pseudo-noir.
PVC, you're still here!
There's an annoying mentality amongst some on the left and right alike that the U.S is essentially omnipotent, and that nothing that happens in any other country could possibly be the result of the interests, desires, hopes or stupidity of the people that actually live there.
An embassy's job is to promote the values, culture and interests of its host country abroad. There's not much to be shocked about regarding the U.S Embassy in Paris (truly a den of spies and intrigue!) tapping one of its country's most prominent exports, media celebrities, to do some work on behalf of the embassy.
Basically, the helicopter footage was the only thing of value Wikileaks has ever released.