Let's not suck the ghost of his dick too hard.
Let's not suck the ghost of his dick too hard.
I mean, it's not. After all, some of the people without penises were men.
Very well, Wall Street it is.
Paranoid Android.
Most suicide attempts without guns are unsuccessful. Most suicide attempts with guns are successful.
Yup!
Yeah, it's unclear whether Gothmog is killed by Ecthelion's spiked helm or by the fall into the fountain, but either way I included him because his death at least involves a long fall.
They don't, by the way. The "wings" Tolkien mentions are clearly the "wings of shadow" that it casts on the walls. Also, every Balrog we ever meet in Tolkien's work ends up falling to its death, which would be weird for winged creatures.
"Stop shaming me!"
She's not *complaining.* She's speaking from her own experience of being misgendered. Whether or not she's trans, she's clearly got plenty of experience not fitting into society's definition of what a woman "should" look like, which is the crux of the bathroom issue in the first place.
I'd argue (quietly) that Da Legna belongs on that list too, albeit at the bottom.
We also have Chris Murphy!
New York pizza is for people who don't mind reheated slices as a quick snack, but true pizza doesn't fuck around with that. New Haven pizza is made with love.
New Haven. Everyone who's ever had it walks away saying it's the best ever.
I went to school with a Korean kid named "Inchul Hwang." Took people about ten seconds to start calling him "Inch Wang."
Yup! It's almost as if instead of trying to understand the story circle, the commenter above just tried and failed to make a witty comment about Harmon's writing style.
That's a linguistic tic common to speakers from southern New England. The town of New Britain, CT, for example, is pronounced "New BRIH-en" with an exaggerated glottal stop where that "t" should be.
"Dead-on American accent" is a bit generous. She says about twelve words in the whole season.
No love for Elvis Costello's "How To Be Dumb"? He and Bruce Thomas have barely spoken to each other for 25 years because of that song.
Because it's a nuanced look at one family's complicated relationship with war, hardship, and the Confederacy. Robertson doesn't condemn Virgil Caine, but he doesn't let him off the hook either.