davidcgc
davidcgc
davidcgc

Bear's silly Vlogs are the best. Hell of a coincidence the AV Club would run a feature about bagpipes the same day as an interview with Bear McCreary.

It's not a deal breaker, but from the timeline of the show, we know pretty much exactly how old Clark is. Twenty-five years of Kara in the Phantom Zone plus twelve years of her growing up puts Clark at 37 and change, depending on how fast time moves in the show and how old a baby he was when he left.

Definitely. She even put her family crest on the right side of the chest.

She's literally a walking punchline (Snowball I, presumably, was a white cat).

I did think the staging pretty much demanded you think, "But how did he walk?" as soon as his hand being solid against the floor is a plot point. It would've been better if, I don't know, he caught himself falling by grabbing the wall of the cage.

Yeah, that's probably not going to do. I've just been delighting in the fact that Apple, for service purposes, defines any machine eight years old as "obsolete" since I found out last month.

Did you actually try to meet Delilah before the end of the game? I wandered over during the supply run, and had a fun conversation about how the cable car was for emergencies, only. I suppose Henry could've walked around the ravine, but when I climbed a tree over the ridge, I fell off the edge of the world.

I don't know that you need to wait as much as you might think. My laptop is a few months away from being Officially Obsolete (though it was early-2008's top-of-the-line. That discrete graphics card really helps stretch the lifetime), and the game was playable, and enjoyable, with minimal settings and a reduced

Kanan’s various quips to Hera about her overall attitude towards the Purrgills seem a bit out of character for him.

It's Star Wars. In ESB, the crew went out into what one would reasonably expect to be the cold, airless interior of an asteroid protected by nothing but masks connected to air-filled water bottles. Breathing is apparently the main issue when it comes to environmental survivability.

It just suddenly reminded me of Caprica, where Patton Oswalt played a character who was treated in the series like Space-Jon-Stewart, but in terms of actual jokes, was more like Space-Jay-Leno. I guess variety show writing is, you know, hard.

Google is failing me, but I'm trying to figure out where I saw "In Spite of Ourselves" on another TV show or movie (and not the Billy Bob Thornton one it was written for). I suppose it's possible it's a false memory and I just heard it on the radio, but I could've sworn I've seen it before in a few places sung by

I thought that looked like the Black Mercy.

The writers could've at least let one of the nameless Rebel pilots jump to lightspeed back to the Rebel fleet and it wouldn't have impacted the story.

The same thing happens in ESB over a longer timeframe. At first, Vader is fighting Luke one-handed. Then after Luke gets him with the steam, Vader puts a little more into it, and later, once Luke actually scores a hit on Vader, he goes for the hand almost immediately.

There's no knight! There's no knight and no horse!

Yes, who can forget the gripping psychological dissolution of Jack Shining.

Not only that, but it's heavily suggested that said Time Lord actually WAS originally a woman in most past incarnations - probably in her original one.

Yes, I remember that show (wait, four seasons? Wow), but we're both in our mid-to-late twenties. Even Classic Simpsons can be a deep cut in our cohort, if you're not talking to people who grew up as precocious, friendless dweebs.

Except for all the damn blood and guts.