'tis the end
'tis the end
'tis the end
'tis the end
Title of my autobiography: "A giant pelican by the name of Fate"
Not sure what made her change her mind, but here is the Dot Wiggin Band playing Foot Foot live in a recording from last year:
Yes! I actually came here to post exactly this, so I'm very pleased to see that someone beat me to it. Faith in humanity restored.
You're right: People are of course allowed to die in Svalbard, but you're not allowed to be buried there unless you decide to get cremated, in which case you may bury the urn.
Not exactly an inopportune moment to cry, but the first and only time I watched Silent Running, I must have been seven or eight years old. As far as I remember, the movie ends (and here I'll spoil it for anyone who hasn't seen it) with an artificially intelligent robot sacrificing itself to save what's left of plant…
@ ConstipatedDuck - But Abed didn't become Troy, and I think it was important that the episode established that as clearly as possible. If Pudi/Abed's Troy impression had been too good, at least I would have spent parts of the episode wondering of they really had swapped bodies, and I think the episode would have…
I can't have been the only one to imagine that SIms must have been a bit like Joe when he wrote this review: Swilling scotch and popping pain pills, sweating all over everyone and grunting and writing frantically.
This episode is just trying to divide us the way professor Cornwallis tried to divide the study group in the episode itself. Now, how meta is that!?
Sims is clearly upset, but he's processing those feelings through the therapy of words.
That thought struck me as well. On the other hand I kind of hope it's something less obvious…
Classic cult indoctrination!
I at least suspect that Jude's discomfort with Robin dating Johnno runs deeper than her just confusing him with his father, and that she knew something that Robin (and we) don't.
But it did use Ø instead of O in the opening credits.
Wow. This thread is even worse than the show.
Yes, it's one my favourite parts of the book, and here it was by far the scene I enjoyed the most.
Yes, it's one my favourite parts of the book, and here it was by far the scene I enjoyed the most.
Not to mention the fact that Pakistan is a nuclear power itself. You would think that at least one of the roughly 175 million Pakistanis left alive after the attack would want to retaliate.