ericcheung1981
Eric Cheung
ericcheung1981

You speak German?

I'm technically an agnostic with regard to an intelligent creator, an atheist when it comes to the idea that I should call such a creator a "god" or worship it as such (I have contempt for any dictator that refuses to make its rules clear and punish us with fury for being unable to live up to those ambiguities), and

Paul Forest aka Spock Vegas. He looks and sounds just like him.

They're not that long-lost. They were definitely on YouTube several years ago. But if it's the same channel I remember, it got flagged. Once it was shut down, the person who uploaded them offered bootlegged DVDs for the cost of burning and shipping to anyone who asked.

Great Job Basic Cable!

Stewardess? I speak Chive.

When I was watching this, I too thought about Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, as well as The Day the Earth Stood Still, Bill & Ted's time travel rules, and Star Trek: Deep Space Nine's "Emissary."

Except we no longer have any of the three branches of the federal government working. That's pretty bad.

I anyone's interested in a lecture on how Congress got like this, and how the Citizen Equality Act of 2017 can fix it, watch this video:

Window to a crack?

I always figured Gene Belcher would grow up to be Eugene Mirman.

I get the desire to have Taiwanese, or at least Chinese, actors in the roles on the show, but if the alternative is not to have a show of and by Asians or to have one with a cast of mixed-Asian descent, then I choose the latter. This is an instance where incrementalism is a reality. Because of Fresh Off the Boat,

Especially, since Interstellar was inspired by Kip Thorne's conversations with Carl Sagan about Contact. In 2014, there were two movies that came out that I had first heard about around 2006, that I had been eagerly waiting for that entire time. One was Boyhood, the other was Interstellar.

Awesome, but how do you top Kinski and Herzog literally plotting to kill each other like Looney Tunes characters.

The episode, like all the spoofs, had a layer of narrative they wanted to tell, and other than simply talk about the various projects they did, such as True Stories, it had to come from from characters. The tension was an angle practically demanded by the subject matter. If it's an episode about a mad genius, then I

I took the Tom Waits thing to be a bit of a spoof of "Swamp," with a lamp, like "Naive Melody."

Good list, but it's missing Contact.

Well, Family Guy did a Springfield episode, so they kind of did a backwards version.

You may get three throws, and get to use the fallen pins to ricochet, but the scores are usually about half what they are in ten-pin*.