cseunuch--disqus
Captain Ron J. MacReady
cseunuch--disqus

Warner Bros. has gotten especially lazy with their blu-ray menus.

AT&T only offers up to 18mpbs in the city I live, and even it's kinda worthless for streaming unless only one person in the house is using a device, which rarely happens.

It's not as awful as hard drives. I plunked down $350 for a firewire 20GB Lacie drive to store music on my Mac G4 Cube in 2001. Now you can get a 20GB flash drive for like $10.

Yeah, that's some good stuff there!

I paid about $40-$50 a pop for the individual seasons of Kids in the Hall as they were being released. I think now you can get all five in a box set for about $40.

I've been a rabid collector of DVDs and blu-ray ever since I bought my first surround sound system in 2000. That was the moment it was like, "OK, finally, this is like having the theater at home, without all the rude jerks who talk during the movie!"

I picked up Virtual Boy for $20 on clearance at ToysRUs and most of the games for the system for a buck apiece before selling it all on eBay for $200 a couple years later.

Four is one of my favorite albums of all time. I'd love to see a remaster of their Sub Pop catalog at least for play on streaming services or better yet some deluxe vinyl reissues. Now that I think about it, there's a lot of stuff from that era on Sub Pop that would benefit from some remastering.

True story: in the early '90s, my friend retrieved this cheap plastic kaleidoscope thing from a claw machine at our neighborhood Mazzio's Pizza. When you looked in it there was a picture of a dude dressed in nothing but a cowboy hat and boots sitting on a rock whackin' it. All we could figure was there had to have

That's the one!

Well, maybe forgotten is the wrong word. It's definitely been hard to find/watch in the U.S. for years until Shout Factory put it on DVD 4-pack a couple years ago.

The music that provided the emotional gut punch at the end of American Sniper was an obscure Morricone piece from the forgotten western The Return of Ringo…

There's been a disturbing amount of scores lately that are a variation/ripoff of John Murphy's "Adagio in D Minor" (from the film Sunshine), notwithstanding its ubiquity in film trailers.

My dad, my brother and I must have watched the obscure Italian superhero comedy Super Fuzz dozens of times recorded off of HBO when I was a kid. We loved it and practically had it memorized. To me it's an even more iconic part of early '80s childhood than the Superman movies. It wasn't until years later when trying to

Sounds like you're more into the "silent protagonist" kind of games that don't have a ton of dialogue. Witcher III protagonist Geralt is a chatty Cathy, and a lot of the game's plot is delivered through branching dialogue a la the Bioware games. BUT, the types of quests and general feel of the game's open world and

Ha, actually I live in the suburbs in the middle of the capital city, a stone's throw from I-55, nothing rural about it.

My house is on a heavily wooded one acre lot in Mississippi. During the spring/summer, mowing and/or clearing debris is a Sisyphean task.

Lord Jesus Harold Christ Almighty on a Rubber Fucking Crutch, YARD WORK… *heavy sigh* That's all I really have to add.

I love my Wii U, and I bought one Amiibo (Link) out of curiosity and for potential usefulness in Hyrule Warriors, but I just don't get it.

As a lot of you are I'm sure, I'm still making my way through the totally witchin' Witcher III. It's starting to feel a bit like an Ubisoft game, with a map slap full of question marks and exclamation points I haven't gotten around to yet. But at least with The Witcher every quest big or small is interesting (most of