conan-in-ireland
conan in ireland
conan-in-ireland

Has there ever been a TV show actually about Hell? Seems like it could be pretty cool, like Lost with demons.

Didn't Pixar say that they didn't include Andy's dad because it would have been too expensive to design and render and such?

While people have criticized Hanks in the movie, I loved him for exactly this reason. Plus, he rarely gets to chew the scenery the way he does in this movie.

While I appreciate the submitter's forward thinking attitude toward gender, there's already a word for "gender-neutral partner" — it's "partner."

I laughed like a maniac on the subway when Betsy Sodaro read her poem, and I damn near lost my mind at "I am changing like a butterfly going through that one process."

He says "I'm TRYING to eat LUNCH over here."

From what I've read (I think in Variety), they did a lot to get her on board, including (a) letting her write and (b) moving production from LA to New York, all of which are plusses in my book.

From what Roiland has said in interviews, Dan Harmon had a lot to do with the show having a real story structure center. Before he started working on the show, it was insane. You can kinda see this in the original short:

God that Wu-Tang beat is so dark… I've heard that song a million times but hearing it last still creeped me the fuck out.

I'm not well-versed in SCII, but I think the commentators said she was range-mining, so that probably kept her afloat without her needing to build another base?

I started playing in the open beta too, and it's awesome. I was surprised how easy it is to earn gold, especially if you focus on Arena instead of buying packs.

Yogi Berra, Lou Pinella, Bucky Dent, Billy Martin, Dallas Green, Dick Houser, Bill Virdon, Billy Martin, Scott Marrow, Billy Martin, Bob Lemmon, Billy Martin, Gene Michael, Buck Showalter…

He's been working on Gameological for quite a while.

Just do the line.

That list is pretty awesome. I saw them two years ago and unfortunately their setlist was dominated by the last two albums. (Although they did play Specialist.) Maybe that's changed in two years.

Time Machine Did It is probably his best — insofar as the story works the best — but all his books are full of funny jokes. They're a hard sell at $16 each, but I wouldn't think twice about spending $10 on them.

Possibly a strong argument for each category bumping up to 6-7 nominees. There are just too many great films released each year.

That's a good point. For some reason, I thought she had the same bad Oscar luck as Scorcese.