disinterestedpasserby
DisinterestedPasserby
disinterestedpasserby

I’m glad all you guys enjoy yours but I think they were the most uncomfortable shoes I’ve ever worn in my life.

Ant-Man, besides being a really “fun” Marvel movie (second only to GotG), is the only one post-Avengers that doesn’t have the whole “if this is such a world-shattering problem, why don’t you get your friends to help you” issue.

I’m going with “because DC still doesn’t know what in the hell they’re doing.”

I’m thinking that was a fluke at this point.

This was the best Star Trek movie they ever made.

It boggles my mind that people still pay money to go see Adam Sandler movies.

It didn’t do it “quickly.” I gave up several episodes in when it was about a bunch of bumbling unlikable secret agents that had their plane taken over every other episode.

There are so many exceptions to this “rule” it’s not even funny. I assume bloggers have to make up stuff like this so they don’t go full Earnest Hemingway.

Another “movie myths” episode to look forward to. Yay. Maybe we’ll see some “viral videos” debunked as well.

I just assume everyone else is like me and gave up on AoS.

That’s on you, man.

Ant-Man was great. Stands alone from the rest of the MCU pretty well too so you don’t need to catch up a lot beforehand. Frankly, I thought Ant-Man was more enjoyable than Age of Ultron, which I thought was something of a bloated mess.

For someone that watched Winter Soldier but gave up on Agents of SHIELD what’s the status of SHIELD?

Ready Player One is the Family Guy of sci-fi.

It usually isn’t the popular books that become classics. People are excited about them for a while and then they go away. Maybe it’s the English major in me talking, but a classic has to be more than “it was a fun read.” I know people are all excited about stuff like The Martian and Ready Player One but if those books

As I’ve said elsewhere, I doubt RPO has staying power. It’s just so reliant on dated references I can’t see people reading it as time goes on.

I doubt it. I enjoyed the audiobook but this love letter to 80’s nerd culture is going to be so dated as time goes on.

I thought it was a fun read but I don’t see it as a classic. I’d be surprised if people are still reading it in a few years.

Well, I guess it’s a good thing that you don’t have to put your credit card info at the Costco site if you’re doing in-store pickup.

Wheb I started, a huge chunk of my time was “waiting on hold for tech support” but now it’s been replaced by “looking stuff up on the Internet.”