I think the problem is moreso wearing a snappy hat in conjunction with a flame-retardant shirt that's visible from space (the second important element of MRA Chic).
I think the problem is moreso wearing a snappy hat in conjunction with a flame-retardant shirt that's visible from space (the second important element of MRA Chic).
Point taken. I'm just thinking in my wife's case where she's in healthcare research (so, not the stereotypical Millennial "creative" gig), and she can realistically only get a job in that field in the three biggest, most expensive cities in our country.
Also, you have to be able to find work to attain that budget. It's all good and well to say you could get a spectacular place in Nebraska for $3000 a month, or whatever absurd NY rent figure you want, but that also means you need to find a job in Nebraska that brings down more than $36k (post-tax) a year.
As a fellow Canadian, I give it an Eh, Plus.
I bought and enjoyed Funeral when it first came out (Canadian, not hipster), and the singles still hold up (even caught the end of Neighbourhood #3 (Power Out) on the drive home today). But, re-listening to it now, it's very clearly an early effort, and their later albums are more interesting. I don't know if the…
Once they reach the 2000s, could they just take the original X-Men movie, and Back To The Future Part II it, cutting in some plot line involving the First Class era cast?
This is a low volume model which has pretty spectacular depreciation (a quick check of used models show it only loses about 25% of initial value after 4 years). Also, since it's a performance model, buying new means you aren't buying something that's spend 60k miles being abused by someone who thinks they're Kimi…
Five words. Hugh Jackman Clone Daisy Chain.
Let me tell you my theory about The Prestige…
I can only speak for the Toronto portion of the show, but asbestos was legal through 1989, and any part of the city you'd actually want to feature was pretty much fully developed by that point. I tried buying a house here. EVERYTHING has asbestos. I mean, I was born in Toronto before '89, I'm probably part asbestos.
Actually, a common tactic of used car salespeople is to not give your child back after they appraise it, until you agree to buy their child. That's why you always keep a spare child with you.
Although male privilege probably plays a huge part of it, most male TV anti-heroes are still generally written as charming and competent (some more effectively than others). Sort of wish-fulfillment. Dunham seems to very deliberately write Hannah as grating and average.
Also, the line before that ("I feel like I've been incarcerated in a blueberry") coined the nickname for Gus's car.
"There are only three sports: bullfighting, motor racing, and mountaineering; all the rest are merely games."
Majorettes were the shit though, between a selection of relatively mundane cars, and having semi-functional suspension.
Who runs Bartertown?
It's definitely the same kind of car as Mike drove in BB (although he also used a series of cheap Buicks as well, likely a habit he'll start picking up in BCS). By the 80's Chrysler wasn't that bad, they'd improved build quality (at least way better than their atrocious late 70's levels), the engine and transmission…
Fair, but even then, Rey was neither beloved or hated on NotTattooine, just very solitary (Blobby Simon Pegg alien was pretty much the only interaction we saw, and he just gave a limited number of shits).
At least it showed her being a little shaky with flying ability, and her success was largely dependent on home-court advantage. Also, her (probable) grandfather was really good at piloting insane jet chariots (at age 7!), and no one called him a Marty Sue, just an obnoxious brat. The lightsabre thing seemed a little…
I, for one, would watch the hell out of a Mavis Beacon* biopic, showing her learn to each typing, overcoming the struggle of not actually existing.