drstephenstrange
Dr. Stephen Strange
drstephenstrange

That second thing would definitely not work.

>only works on an athlete with the litheness and physical confidence to pull it off

I can see that, but it always makes me think of Star Trek: Enterprise.

For what its worth, I’m with you about SG-1. That show was great. I think the big problem is the studio went so big so quickly that it really doesn’t have anywhere else to go other than to just reboot everything.

I imagine you have to have an ego to make it at the level he is at in acting. You’re selling yourself as the best, you have to believe in it to make others believe it as well.

The problem with SGU is that it is getting into Star Trek territory. 

Not really. It wasn’t great. 

This is actually a concern about him wrestling these days. He is so much bigger than he used to be it will be very difficult for him to pull off the fast paced style he used to wrestle.

ThatTeach right now

I’m sure his tens of millions of dollars comfort any sense of sorrow.

>Remote work is a culture thing as much as it is a policy/productivity thing. Some people just don’t fit certain work cultures.

The “distractions” argument doesn’t make a lot of sense to me. All the distractions of work - namely other workers and the internet- exist at home as well. Being at home piles even more distractions on - spouses, kids, video games, TV, books, models, etc. I don’t logically see how there are less distractions at work.

That looks like a smiling Stone Cold Steve Austin.

I 100% understand wanting employees back at work so that they are on task and working regularly and continuously. Productivity does matter.

Now playing

> it guarantees prices and profits as high as the market will bear

Which is the point. That seems to be something that many bloggers on Giz don’t seem to understand. The whole point of these kind of surge prices is to drive away customers. Which I know sounds weird, but it is the only way to lessen demands on business resources that can keep up. 

>“eliminate fierce competition between Kroger and Albertsons, leading to higher prices for groceries and other essential household items for millions of Americans.”

How is the new anime?

>And let’s face it, the poets and artists aren’t going to go learning to be electricians and bricklayers.