derekcfpegritz
Derek C. F. Pegritz
derekcfpegritz

Wow. That was awesome!

It is going to take a lot—A LOT—to top The A-Team.

I'm actually quite surprised by how engaging The Passage is—mainly because it deals with *actual* vampires (or, at least, vampire-like creatures) that can fly and drink blood and don't sparkle like drag queens at Mardi Gras.

Lego Spacing Guild = Totally Cool(tm).

This sounds AWESOME.

I'm really beginning to be disturbed by this whole "Don't mess with Apple" mentality that seems to be growing ever more prevalent in Hollywood—probably because Apple has a pseudo-monopoly on all the major tools used in content production...which is why my entire studio is PC-based. And, no, that doesn't stop me from

It still perturbs me to this day that the aliens could build gigantic ships that could cross interstellar space and raze entire cities...but they couldn't invent Norton Antivirus.

Such great ideas wasted on limp-wristed kiddie-fodder. Ohwell, I'll read it anyway! The first one was...fun, if rather tedious—only because it was dumbed down and softened up for younger audiences. Still, giant bioneered monsters versus clankin' steam-driven mechs is ALWAYS gonna be at least kind of awesome. :)

@Josh Wimmer: I wouldn't even bother to watch it if it wasn't full of bi sex.

Whoa—they weren't already inductees? At least the matter has been rectified!

Huh. So THAT's where The Airborne Toxic Event got their name.

I would give my left arm for a poster-sized version of the absinthe advert.

This. Looks. AWESOME.

If *I* have anything to do with it, it will. The Vast Left-Wing Conspiracy needs a stern, bloodthirsty leader who doesn't mind getting his hands dirty!

I actually liked this show back in 1985. I thought it was remarkably creative for its time. Today, looking back, I can now tell it was just as derivative and goofy as all televised sci-fi of the period...but it's still a lot of fun to watch!

Why do you think the web was born? Porn, porn, porn!

God's Demon was 10,000 kinds of Completely Awesome(tm). One of the best takes on life in the Pit I've ever read. However, you MUST own copies of Barlowe's Inferno and Brushfire collections to properly appreciate the visual experience of the novel.

Egan has an amazing facility at depicting the interface of transhumanizing technologies with everyday people. I question his choice of setting it in a country that is almost guaranteed to become a nuclear waste dump in the next twenty years, but hey...I haven't read it yet.

OMG, this is AWESOME!