How did she feed them on Dragonstone? In Mereen? I’ve been wondering how she fed these armies ever since she got them.
How did she feed them on Dragonstone? In Mereen? I’ve been wondering how she fed these armies ever since she got them.
Filed to: RECAP
The way the ad industry had completely broken down Ken’s body and soul by the end of Mad Men was probably something Trudy Campbell found hilarious and gratifying.
I wasn’t claiming that. That’s an entirely understandable reaction for survivors. I’m just referring to folks on the outside, like most of us here.
He’s a little like the mule with the spinning wheel, is what I mean.
*rolls eyes* Jesus CHRIST *goes over and stands by the laser printers, Blair Witch-style*
I don’t know if “tugging on their genitals” is the best way to throw the average pedophile off of his rhythm.
“this is, after all, a studio comedy, which these days are almost all self-actualization lessons in disguise”
In the pilot, she was convinced that moving to California was a good idea because of a butter ad.
Sick burn, Phil Not Phil.
For your sake I really hope this is just a troll account and you aren’t really like this.
If spending the most money gives you the best Star Wars opinions, then the Disney corporation is the final arbiter on all things Star Wars. They spent $4 billion on it, and they really like The Last Jedi.
There’s a guy on this sub who kept calling me a “brat” for saying that Star Wars doesn’t belong to the superfans.
He’s arguing that because he spent money keeping the franchise alive both during it’s lull from ‘80's - 90's and today that his opinions should matter more than casual fans and that his desires for the…
One great thing about this episode is that Rebecca finally got her wish from all of last season: Paula is completely integrated into her girl group. In typical Crazy Ex-Girlfriend fashion Rebecca gets what she wanted, but she no longer even remembers that was what she wanted.
I thought it did a decent job at lampshading that, though, in that the kids themselves kind of idealize Beverly throughout the entire movie, and at the end she’s literally floating above them as if on a pedestal, and they have to reign it in and acknowledge her humanity and bring her down to earth with them, where…