eviljenius--disqus
EvilJenius
eviljenius--disqus

All I know it, if the way they teach math now was better (or made sense), all of my nieces and nephews - who aren't dumb kids - wouldn't be asking me to explain it to them. Which I can't, because it doesn't make any sense to me, either. So I show them the way I learned it way back when, and they get it almost

That and Ryan Reynolds trading barbs with Triple H is all I remember about that movie.

I was hyped going in, as I think this might have been the second movie that I remember having a trailer online (the first being "Independence Day"), and after I spent two hours downloading it, I watched it 100 or so times.

I agree that Nomak is a (much) better villain, the sequel looks better, has a more interesting plot, upgrades from the already great Donal Logue to freakin' Ron Perlman in the dick-henchman role, and is generally superior in every way.

No, he didn't say she was a bad actor. He said her movements and facial expressions are pretty stiff, especially compared to the other kids on the show (and they are), and was wondering if that was a conscious decision on the part of the actress, or an unintentional byproduct of another line of work?

Out of curiosity, what were some of the new ones? NVM, I Googled them.

Meanwhile, on "Black-ish" Zoe is described as being 17, about to head off to college, and it's basically just a courtesy that she ask to go anywhere. Words no actual upper middle-class black parents have ever said about their daughter. Man, do I hate Dre.

Agreed, I'd much rather have a neutral singular pronoun, even if it's a brand new one. "They" just constantly confuses me as to whether someone is referring to one person or a group of people.

The highlight of my teen years (and secret shame of my adult ones) was going to see the taping of the Jim Jupiter episode, and using my mom's crew connections to meet Christina Applegate, while totally neglecting to even ASK to meet Ed O'Neill or Katey Sagal.

Also, Mystery Neighbor being from the same program as Quinn, I figured it was highly unlikely they'd be able to get him to talk. Quinn was gassed essentially to death without giving anything up.

I meant more in terms of "cut a deal with criminal billionaire so he can avoid jail time, even though you have him dead to rights, so you can further your own career" as the corruption.

"Under Obama, the idea was that the things you’ve looked at online are your (and also the government's) business and your (and also the government's) property"

Which is weird (or just the usual uninformed Internet blathering), since Nymeria's mother is from the GoT's equivalent of "Asia"…

I don't think "poor fight choreography" (or rather, "it's blatantly obvious that Finn Jones did not have the time/training to be able to effectively sell the fight choreography") is a biased opinion, but rather an undisputable fact.

It all exists. But the Netflix shows all take place in New York, and for New Yorkers, nothing that happens outside of NYC matters as much. Hence, The Incident is the only thing any of them ever bring up.

Thus inadvertently showing (the audience) how corrupt af they all are.

I see two problems with that. First, how many bars do you think a small, upstate New York towh has? And second, bars do have an established venue…with local clientele. Casinos bring in external money. If the town is on the verge of economic collapse to begin with, fleecing the citizens for their last dollars isn't

That's a lot of assumptions and implied intent, but I guess that's why they're called opinions.

In fairness, she did say she regretted it later. ;-)

Exactly why it's being mentioned here in the comments section, which exists solely for things that aren't a big deal, instead of in a strongly-worded letter to the editor.