eviljenius--disqus
EvilJenius
eviljenius--disqus

That's the upside to being an actor instead of a boxer; you don't have to be clean.

Not when it's smack in the middle of all the trailers, it isn't.

It's like a chess match where every move can be checkmate, you can't offer your opponent a draw, you're only punished for the most outrageous instances of cheating, and when time runs out three idiots decide who won.

You're surprised because you're wrong. It's not terrible by any means, but it's not nearly as good as 1 or 3.

I was going to say, I saw him several years ago opening for Donald Glover, and he was pretty funny doing stand up as an up and comer.

Yep. I think that might be the only episode of That 70s Show I've ever seen.

I'm not sure if you're joking or not, but I totally agree. And that goat-headed guy. A lot of WTF?! going on (in a good way).

And I as well.

I thought of it more as their motivation once the bullets started flying was "try not to die." When you're being sprayed with automatic rifle fire on an open street from an elevated position, "descalating" aka retreating, will also get you shot to death, as happened to every officer who broke cover without having

That sounds either awesome or terrible. Which is it?

Uh….Curtis Armstrong is the legendary thespian who played Dudley "Booger" Dawson in the Revenge of the Nerds movies and Charles DeMar in Better Off Dead (knew this immediately).

I'm big enough to admit that (at least it certainly appears) you were right.

But the Internet would LOVE him.

I think the restraint he showed in not falling to the ground and literally dying laughing when Reggie threatened to "make a scene" was admirable.

If your idea of revenge is just wanting to be left alone, but instead going through the enormous effort of making friends out of the people who bullied you, being completely emotionally shredded by what you did to those you couldn't turn into allie, and completely horrified by what you ultimately had to do to "win",

I was hoping they'd mention at some point what it was she wanted to do that he wasn't cool with.

So rather than just be in the closet and single, he goes through the effort of finding a smoking hot girlfriend, having Viagra-powered sex with her that he doesn't enjoy, and dealing with her insecurities that he's cheating on her? Yeah…that makes more sense, I guess.

I thought it was clear from the exchange between Monica and Laurie that she WAS compelled to vote the Raviga line, if she wanted to keep her job.

Except that's not actually true. Whatever crazy magic Mirri Maz Duur used on Khal Drogo happened before the dragons were born (you could possibly argue it caused them to be born) - and it's obvious it wasn't the first time she'd used blood magic. It only seems like magic "came back" afterward because 90% of the story

He actually did do that, in their first conversation of the season.