I know this is easily look-up-able, except I failed at looking it up, so…
I know this is easily look-up-able, except I failed at looking it up, so…
I haven't kept up since it came back, so maybe I'm the wrong person to be advocating for the 2nd round of seasons.
Yeah. The Sting's the one that's missing for me from this list. Also Three Hundred Big Boys. But really, The Sting.
I… kinda liked Your Highness.
Yet another artist skips the bustling metropolis that is South Dakota.
I'm pretty sure my inability to handle money well stems from Seinfeld, where like half the episodes end with an already-nearly-broke character being out a few hundred bucks.
Having read them both a few times, I wound up liking Neverwhere better.
C'mon. Say you like Sidney better than Shakespeare. It's allowed. Just do it.
McKinley isn't a girl's name. Nor is Mc-anything.
Every episode of Voyager that I've seen, give or take a few, ends with the crew figuring out how to reverse engineer some superior antagonist technology in order to solve a problem, or being inspired by antagonist technology to try something new that solves a problem.
Yeah. Bah to that.
My favorite poets right now are probably Graham Foust and Arda Collins. I promised myself I wouldn't do this…
True. But the set of people who read contemporary poetry is pretty small, and pretty much restricted to the same set of people writing it. As someone who writes/reads/whines about contemporary poetry, I often joke that only 8 people still read poetry that's being written today. I don't think the joke is THAT far…
The last name's a stage name, but Skylar is, in fact, his real first name.
It's always a little depressing that this question/thread inevitably is 99.9% poems written 50+ years ago.
Chase snarling "it was hell" to describe Canada was pretty funny. I was on board with the theme of this episode, and "looking at the show/characters through a more objective lens" has worked well in the past (the season 3 scene of the animated Christmas episode, in live action, was brilliant.)
This wasn't very good, but it wasn't too awful. I'm not sure I'm on board with some of your objections. I guess I didn't see Britta's jerkiness. My biggest problem with the episode was a general lack of good jokes. The last two episodes felt off to me, but were hilarious enough to make up for it.
So uh… this was good?
First, I'm vaguely annoyed that this is up so far ahead of the episode. Just seeing the bit on the frontpage, I'll be watching while expecting the episode to be meh, which is a shame or something.
As far as I can tell, FLCL is pretty much the entire anime experience in 6 episodes.