durandal1707--disqus
Durandal_1707
durandal1707--disqus

If you're ever in the Chicago area, you can see a concert there:

"Weng-Chiang" is nothing short of cringeworthy to me. That would have been hard to get through if it were normal length, and then it had to be like six episodes long.

Every time Capaldi and Gomez have a scene together, I'm left asking why, oh why, can't we have another season with these two in it. Just one more. Aghhh

While that's true, the explanation would usually be something stupid, like "The Weakest Link" in space.

Well, what a coincidence!

It's interesting to look up its namesake, Millard Fillmore, the 13th (the lucky one!) President of the United States. A mainstay of the bottom 10 on ranked lists of US Presidents, Fillmore (who, fun fact, was named after his mother's maiden name, and later did the same thing to his son, naming him Millard Powers

Reminds me of this:

Not being a New Yorker, I don't know much about Robert Moses, other than having played "Lost New York", an indie time-travel text adventure game from 1996 in which the winning condition, if I remember correctly, was to cause a young Robert Moses to miss a train that was to take him to some crucial meeting, thus

Apparently No. 2 was made. The YouTube video in the article displays a link to it when the video ends:

I've gotta get this freakin' duck away from me!!!

Are you a crook, though?

Babylon 5 used to be on Hulu for free, waaaaaay back in the day.

If they fell, it wouldn't be a live video for long, now, would it?

I'm surprised he didn't name his account after Richard Neville, Earl of Warwick, given what his role in this era of politics is likely to be.

I do kind of wonder if at some point he looked at all the critical praise and box office success that he got for Face-Off, shrugged his shoulders, and thought, okay, let's go with that!

Ah yes, Vampire's Kiss was one I hadn't seen in 1997. In fact, I only found out about that one when googling out of curiosity to figure out where that one picture came from. :-D

Back when this was made, though, wasn't Cage still more known for his earlier, relatively subdued, arty stuff? In 1997, he wasn't really typecast in the "over-the-top" mold that he is now. Even in "The Rock", I remember Connery being the one the more "outrageous" stuff was given to. I remember seeing a bunch of Cage's

Not to mention Liszt and Rossini!

Schubert's even worse; he died at age 31. The Unfinished Symphony was written when he was 25. 25!!

Back when I was 12, my peers and I thought Adam Sandler was just hilarious. What the hell was wrong with us?