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I actually really liked Deadwood and Rome :(

I originally read this as "The Best Time Travel Mug" and ended up pretty damn disappointed.

I originally read this as "The Best Time Travel Mug" and ended up pretty damn disappointed.

Now playing

It brought this to mind (apologies if everyone has seen it).

Was coming here to post exactly this. I've never felt so lousy in a game as the first time my horse died in Red Dead. Totally accidental, in no way effected the game arc, but that first time really made me feel it. I do oh so long for a sequel.

Would this then change the research to whatever the opposite of "peer reviewed" is?

I could not agree more. Remove that last shot in the cafe and the end would've saved the movie for me (or just have Alfred look up, but not see him). It was still pretty close.

"Randomly-generated-food" definitely appeals to the D&D geek in me.

When I first read the headline, I was hoping for a different type of "weird." Oh well, maybe one will somehow lead to the other.

It would really depend on the quality of that extended life. Age associated diseases would have to be addressed before "living forever" (or even just much longer) would be truly appealing.

OK, forgive my ignorance, but what is he saying at the end? "Hi, Tom?" If so, who's Tom?

Regardless of what the Rock prefers, WB/DC is trying to start Shazam franchise, not a Black Adam franchise...

No Philip K. Dick? Hmm. I must've missed it somewhere...

I think we should be probing all frontiers if possible, so I'd go with "in addition to" as opposed to "instead of."

Good calls with "Undermarket Data" and "Seven Years from Home," thanks for the suggestions.

Also what I was expecting (though for no good reason on my part). However, I think the surprise lent to it being that much funnier to me.

This happened to me a few years back when I was working at SOE. Found out the morning of from a post on... Kotaku.

Good points and I agree completely regarding having concern for the people who are actually at risk.

Christopher Nolan, discoverer of the BRAAM and its conjugate particle the anti-BRAAM.