dereknoakes
Derek Noakes
dereknoakes

You realize that's always how their stage presence has been, though, right? Even in their heyday, they've always been stoic live performers. The contrast between their stage presence and the dynamism of their music has been discussed ad-nauseum in interviews, documentaries, etc pretty much as long as they've been

A) Butters successfully acquired the device. The boys chose to destroy it because they couldn't be responsible with that much power.

Username, too! Trifecta complete.

I would argue that Y: The Last Man went through a similar slump during roughly the same point in its run, and came back around again to be something truly great by the end. I know there are mixed opinions on it, but its one of my all time faves.

I shouldn't have, as I've had to actually talk a friend (figuratively) off the ledge before, but that scene made me laugh so fucking hard.

I'd put Kentucky Route Zero in this category as well. It definitely has a similar vibe, although not the missing/dead girl dynamic.

You mean when they release it? I'd imagine we have a year at least before the 5th and final act is released, and likely another free interlude in between, if their track record holds.

Again, this is covered in the special.

Sure, but it also indicates that he had a past history of hitting his sister with a blunt object and not knowing how much damage it could potentially cause.

The body was moved twice before a proper crime scene was ever set up. People had been traipsing in and out of the house all morning when it was still considered a kidnapping. That trace DNA could have come from literally anyone. They also proved that the DNA found on her underwear could have shown up on underwear

Again, this is all covered in the special. Which you clearly have not watched.

Did you watch the special? They presented a pretty strong theory that Burke did it by accident and the parents covered it up. And at NO point did they insinuate that she was sexually abused by the father.

The show did not insinuate that he garroted anyone, merely that the parents made one as part of the staging.

I started reading Mara Wilson's Where Am I Now, and have also been re-reading Love is a Mix Tape. I read it originally when I was about 21 and had not experienced real loss before. Re-reading 10 years later has been much more of an emotional gut punch.

I've watched various other docu-specials aired this week, and I gotta say, CBS at least took a stance. Whereas most of the other specials have been a very kid gloves retread of the events as they transpired, the CBS special brings in a ton of FBI profilers and various other experts that basically say "If you don't

Liked for avatar/comment synergy.

My guess is the incredibly high volume they're dealing with at any given time causes them to rush the fries out a little faster than most folks would actually prefer them cooked. I'd imagine they spent years perfecting the minimum amount of time they could be fried without seeing a lot of them come back for being

I order mine well-done with cheese, but you can keep the thousand island, thanks.

In-n-Out fries are great as long as you order them well done so they actually fry them long enough.

Oh man, the homeless parking attendant coming in the restaurant near the end and telling some old white guy his car was getting towed was a great callback. Icing on the cake.