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David Fisher
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So this is really an inventory of student insurrections, successful or otherwise. Based on the title, I was expecting schools run by students, by design or otherwise. I was hoping to see Honnouji Academy (or honestly any of a number of anime examples that make up the bulk of the TVTropes page for "Absurdly Powerful

Jackson Pollock is a punchline in popular culture. "He's just splashing paint, anyone could do that!" is a rallying cry, and a microcosm of public understanding of the arts. I was reading about a piece he did, popularly called "Blue Columns," that was purchased by the Australian government for a hefty sum to go in

I loved the 5-minute gloat-fest at the beginning, but I'm a sucker for dumb, mean humor.

One more way Dylan was ahead of our time.

Summer's plot felt like more of a Jerry plot.

He's also "Mr. Duplicity" from Alanis Morisette's "You Outta Know."

Rome didn't fall because of complacency, it fell because it had an unsustainable business model based on continuous expansion, which is one the Master should be cognizant of.

The "Murder These People" App apparently redirects to your company's homepage between everyone on your murder list.

Halfway through the second season, the show has gotten to where it should've been before the end of the first: where we begin to see the way the world is actually dealing with the epidemic.

Runner up: Azula.

I like when the show plays the horror of an all-too-common speculative fiction trope completely straight, like when the body-swap was met with freakouts and terror-vomit (good name for a metal band).

I feel like they tried to re-do this with Comic Book Guy's wife, to greatly diminished results; Manjula has at least become a genuine Springfield resident; the latter smacks of Manic Pixie Dream Girl and Wish-fulfillment fantasy.

This might not count, because I mainly think it rather than saying it, but I think it a lot: from Futurama: "Interesting! No wait, that other thing: tedious." It's my honest response to most things most people say.

I assume they were off the coast of Tunisia, since a Star Wars movie id being filmed nearby, and almost all of the films have had at least one Tatooine-scene (Is Tatooine like the Iowa of the Star Wars galaxy? Like, it SHOULD be irrelevant, but due to obscure political reasons it has disproportionate importance?)

"That odor!" "Ammonia." It's an example of dialog for the audience's benefit. As you say, though, it fits the adventure-serial tone of the flashbacks; the opening sequence actually helps put you in the mood for some otherwise MST3K-worthy fare.

I've never once been able to spot one of the Vigenère keys, but this time, I was able to guess what the answer is and work backwards to find the clue. Based on what it appears to be, I'd suggest looking for it during the 90's commercial segment.

You should check out the Driftless region, around the junction of Minnesota, Wisconsin, Iowa, and Illinois, or the Ohio Valley in southern Ohio and Indiana; there's beautiful, rugged terrain where rivers have carved intricate canyons. There's also some genuine mountains around Lake Superior.

That town has a shitload of churches. There's like, what, 40 households if you squint, and at least 3 places of worship?

I sometimes play a game similar to Roy. I think I'd get a higher score if I didn't spend all my time posting comments on reviews of TV shows on the Internet.

Raekwon as Killer Bee. And while I typically detest whitewashing, I always thought Itachi Uchiha looked a lot like David Bowie…