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I feel like that would be a very good argument a few years ago, before the existence of the WWE network. Wrestling doesn't have to subsist solely on ad revenue. Of course, you need the free shows in order to build a fanbase which can pay.

Well WWE have money. Omega might love Japan but every wrestler knows that they have only so many years making good money. Like, WWE developmental is paying better than most promotions, never mind being a major player on the main roster.

Eh, so what if you lie. Not every lie is damnable. You aren't really doing it to hurt or deceive them but to maintain your own privacy, which you deserve, and which you need.

As I said, the problem is the quickfire questions, which led to the very terse answers. The more information someone gives, the more tailored advice they can receive. So, yes, it is often on, and, yes, Dan has to fill in the blanks when they don't mention anything which may be relevant. Maybe I got the sense that

You're making my point. You're just assuming that, despite being anonymous, everyone has the same circumstances. The writers tend to disclose gender and sexuality, because they see it as relevant, but don't tend to mention their race, culture, economic status, where they live, etc. Everyone just assumes that the

Well, for one, some people might not be comfortable with inviting a stranger into their bedroom, which may be why they write in anonymously.

The other problem was the themes were half-explored. Maybe, not getting answers to all of our questions, or having to ruminate our own answers ourselves is kinda the point, but that makes for a very unsatisfying movie.

If they're only tangentially related to the games' narratives, then are they truly video game movies? Wouldn't they be spin-offs? You can make a decent spin-off to anything, to be honest.

What if the film started with Lawrence waking up, and it seems like a sweet romance, until maybe halfway through the film she discovers surveillance/reads his diary or something and then it becomes a thriller, with Pratt trying to hunt her down? (bonus points if this isn't the first girlsicle he's defrosted)

See, I don't think they would. They all have the same problem: view the story from anywhere outside the PC's viewpoint, and the main character is massively boring.

I think you could have great movies set in those universes, but trying to take choice-heavy RPGs and turn them into linear movies would ruin a big part of what makes those games special.

It is ironic that a school of right-wing politics co-opted the maxim of a radical terrorist organisation.

It would help if they started with good games.

Everyone wants to make good movies. But not everyone wants to make movies that are good in the same way.

Also because internet notoriety gets attention, which either converts into money for sites or youtubers, or ego-boosting for commenters.

Really, mediocrity doesn't exist. Thanks to the internet, and everyone thinking they have the acumen and insight of a professional critic (few do), everything is either the best movie ever, or the worst movie ever.

I think the problem with this video is that this guy, as knowledgeable as he is, doesn't actually have knowledge of how making movies actually works: he's probably never been on a set, and, if he has, it's probably not in a role of any importance. If he had, he probably would be doing that, instead of making youtube

Yeah, people probably don't plan on making mediocre films. They just turn out that way. Everyone goes for as good as they can but there are so many factors which go into making a film, and so much work, that bad films are bound to happen.

I wouldn't call the netflix marvel stuff escapist. Maybe the DC TV stuff, but then again I don't consider that to be a bad thing in of itself.

I don't think this is Nerdwriter's best. My favourite Nerdwriter videos have been ones where he can really sink his teeth into one particular movie or subject and show off his appetite for research, not talk in broad general statements.