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Merus
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I think so, Mrs. Langdon Alger, but surely the creepier furries don't have to write directly to the creators any more

For me, Daria. It turns out I've aged out of it, which is bitterly disappointing because I haven't actually seen all of it, but when I went back to it I mostly found Daria irritating rather than delightfully witty like I remembered.

She was supposedly 23 in the 90s but let's just say you're not wrong about it sounding suspicious.

I can't imagine how the Welsh put up with the British.

Australia often ends up the butt of British jokes, but one of us is the target market for Neighbours and at this point it's not Australians.

In that case, can you respond to the following article, which is where I'm drawing my argument from?

So here's where the rubber hits the road: The Unicode standard does not have a complete representation of all of the world's alphabets. It does not have a complete representation of even the ten most popular alphabets. Its representation of these languages is incomplete to the point where characters that appear in

Sony realised they didn't have access to a comic book universe, but what they DO have access to are a bunch of interesting game properties thanks to their PlayStation division. There's an Uncharted movie in the works - lord knows how they manage to make that not an Indiana Jones knock-off, although at this point it's

Honestly I've got a lot of fondness for the magnetic gloves from one of the Oracle games.

See, the problem with this argument is that 5 million viewers for a strong premise that is probably never going to get to 50 million sounds like a pretty sweet deal. These are the kind of shows that build a brand identity, that get discerning viewers; if the only people still watching NBC are people with not a lot of

It's nice that Bowie went out on a relative high. RIP to the one and only.

One of the things I really liked about the openings to The Wire was that there was a little narrative in each. When you understood what each snippet of film meant, you understood, from the opening, how the money flowed. This doesn't have the same effect.

As someone who became the guy who had to work out the rules to a new game in my group of friends, this is the way I found to be the most effective:

That was the original plan, but apparently after finding out about the hiatus they decided to use the season 2 finale for Not What He Seems and the season 3 finale for the season 2 finale. While it's not a lot of episodes, 4 years of your life is a long time to work on a show.

I would put down actual money that the infinite-sided die is coming back, probably in the season finale. It feels like a concept way too expansive to be used just to summon the monster of the week, and Gravity Falls is usually pretty solid about recognising ideas with potential.

So he doesn't even get to see Parks & Rec go out? Daaaaaang.