Couldn't wait to hear this.
Couldn't wait to hear this.
Exactly what I was thinking, and given the amount of start-ups that have had to pivot to become successful, it's also pretty believable.
I had an old housemate who used to microwave eggs all the time, and I’m not sure if he was doing something wrong or not, but the smell afterwards put me off them for the longest time.
If I remember correctly, Beach House have a few real gems when it comes to hidden tracks.
They played both the electric and acoustic versions when I saw them live about 7 years ago. The acoustic has the slight edge for me:
Is it both of them? Or just Andy Bean? If so Fuller Condon (I had to Google his name) is unfairly uncredited for the majority of episodes.
This isn't as original an idea as you may think:
Surely it should have suggested The Happiness of the Katakuris?
I'm clearly a "glass half empty" kind, as I assumed Zach Braff.
For a moment I confused David Alan Grier with David Liebe Hart, and was briefly much more interested.
Interesting. Would you say it's worth a watch?
Missy should be the new companion, having the Doctor forced to work with her would provide the show with the shot in the arm it's needed for the last couple of seasons.
Not to mention Werner Herzog, Alan Tudyk and Stephen Colbert apparently yet to come.
As the character is pre-transition, doesn't it make sense for a woman to play him?
"But that doesn’t change the fact that the books haven’t come out yet, marking perhaps the first time in television history that the adaptation has come before the source material."
Glad you like it and hope it proves of some use, definitely one of the more appealing books about programming that I’ve come across (I actually think it was posted on here some time ago).
I don’t know your experience level, but I found this a rather nice resource myself:
This song (and others in The Brave Little Toaster) were written by the always amazing Van Dyke Parks. Amongst writing amazing music and arranging for other great musicians, he also played Jack Racine in Twin Peaks.
Another simple, but easily overlooked tool is the timer you almost certainly already have on your phone. Maybe I get distracted and lose track of time more than other people, but it has become an absolutely essential tool in my coffee making process.
As well as being a vital tool for many kitchen purposes, it's also incredibly useful for making a consistently good cup of coffee. Simply weigh out your coffee and water, and you limit the variables in play (obviously there are a few others, such as temperature, style of pouring, but these are in my opinion less…