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David Fisher
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I assume it's like eating: just because they don't have to doesn't mean they don't.

It's a really…distressingly common trope in anime, how are we sure it's a reference to that particular instance of it?

Which is quartz and moganite, which in turn is just another form of SiO2.

Like Rose.

The seeds of affection for Peridot were sewn in Amethyst last episode when Peridot cut Pearl off to say exactly what she was about to say. Then followed a brief silent conversation of Pearl looking indignant, Amethyst grinning like an idiot at Pearl because anyone who gets under Pearl's skin is A-OK in her book,

It seems more like the show is going for a standard "women love bad boys/nice guys finish last" narrative, which is cliché, problematic, and they're doing a bad job of it on top of it.

No offense meant, but you're all wrong and stupid. The correct answer is Mel Brooks. Get to kill some Nazis during the only war everyone pretty much agrees was a good idea, get to spend a career with the funniest people in the world cracking each other up, put the 1st-through-17th fart on film, win an EGOT.

As any Haruhi Suzumiya fan could tell you, an endless summer is not all it's cracked up to be.

I thought it was obvious Theo was trying to set up Silver with Bruce. I mean, it's stupid to think that just because you put a pretty girl in the distant line-of-sight of someone, they'll inevitably become smitten, but it's even weirder to think that a teenager (she's supposed to be what, 14?) raised by total control

About the couch-gag gag: I mean, they never would have made it to 47 seasons (or however many it's been) doing jokes that destroy the reality of the show, but at this point, just let 'em rip. Burn this motherfucker down. Really, if you've been on the air for decades without any internal time passing, you kind of

Well, more the latter-day Hicks-like comics, the angry white guys. I just have it in for Hicks because he's over-rated and smug. Was.

It's an irksome feature of modern comedy (South Park and Bill Hicks come to mind) that, in representing themselves as 'speakers of plain truth,' comedians will in one moment take aim at oppressive power structures, point out hypocrisy, make light of the idiocies of society, etc., and in the next moment, tell a joke

I really enjoyed this one (did anyone notice the fourth driver dodged shouted out "Stinkson!"?), but I was watching as I went to bed and passed out for most of the third act. So that's probably not a good sign.

With "Giant Robots Shouldn't Fight" Steven Universe succinctly encapsulates the duality of the human condition. We worship the Awesome (giant robots, battles, violence) whilst being moral creatures, abhorring violence.

What other show are you talking about?

Like Firefly, we're seeing things from the perspective of the renegades. It would be interesting to see what the Galactic Government's perspective is on things. We know by Bird-Person's admission that he and Rick have committed numerous atrocities in the name of their definition of freedom (which makes Rick almost

Never having been in a church is not as unlikely as never going to the bathroom; since one of the overall arcs is Jake dealing with his immaturity, some episodes dealing with the fallout of his health choices could be fruitful. Like if he gets scurvy, and is surprised to discover that's not just a made-up pirate word.

Was Kittenwoman at Penguin's table earlier this season? Did I dream that? Was there a point to that, or did she just wander on to the set during filming?

Archer if the aesthetic was less Mad Men and more Gem and the Holograms?

Rewatched. Had to come back to point out EVERY ONE of Amethyst's line-readings is golden. I particularly liked "~Hey~."