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1st and foremost, I BELIEVE IN JOHN TETI. *salutes*
2nd, some of us do look forward to the lists every year, and maybe purposely dumping this at the top for attention made this more about you than your cri de coeur.
3rd, if you're not going to say what music you liked in the comments, feel free to send stuff in an

I ended up listening to 500 LPs/EPs/singles this year, and I always try to spend a lot of time on my list, since I think popular music is the best it's ever been. That said, it was a slow year for me. My top 40's here, and songs come later this week!
01. Sufjan Stevens: Carrie And Lowell [Exploding Whale] (best lyrics

Did you watch Heavy Entertainment? It was more uneven than I hoped of Nick Helm, but some episodes were among my favorite television this year. This is just a quality joke. https://youtu.be/7AHB-01161…

Chewing Gum is simultaneously the TYPE of show I champion but the content is not really for me, so I'm glad I enjoyed it so much. She has ridiculous potential.

Oh, I TOTALLY forgot about The Fatty Acids. I'm going to relisten right now, thanks! Even though Rae Cassidy moved, I think her next solo release away from San Fermin will be experimental and moving. (But then Zola Jesus is my legitimate favorite musician working right now, so that tells you my preferences.)

Also Squirrel Girl. Also Adventure Time comics. Also, basically everything he does. What a champion.

I think they have a ton of potential, enough that I bought their cassette for a friend for Christmas.

Whoa, I had no idea you were into that sort of music. Yes, everyone, go see Heathered Pearls.

Yeah, I wouldn't want to accuse you of hyperbole when you wrote that Republicans have had 1 idea and principle to check all policy positions. There's a vast undercurrent of conservative policy writers who have put forth constructive ideas about any variety of issues, which is why that Mike Lee is constantly celebrated

Agreed!

I mean, try it, but as someone whose avatar everywhere but her is Prince Alexander from King's Quest VI/has it in his top 5 games ever, it is neither King's Quest nor mind-blowing. It's like a modern American graphic adventure game and not something that requires a lot of your talents at clicking or thinking.

I typically don't post here because I'm very negative about video games right now and you all don't need that.

You can't go wrong! Unless you end up looking for places to buy games inexpensively and then accidentally end up on a flash games site that destroys your entire weekend.

I hate to post because Gwen's post (as is A.V. Club tradition in years before and during presidential elections) has 0 to do with popular culture and shouldn't be on The A.V. Club, buuuut….

Yeah, I thought her 2nd season of her show was really good, but her 3rd season and stand-up special and movie in 1 year made them all suffer in quality. We don't need her to saturate the market with B/B-minus material, both for comedy general and for American woman stepping to the fore.

The piano from it would have worked far better. Slowing down a purposely abrasive sound is a bad idea if you aren't Oneohtrix Point Never.

Regarding the last question, maybe it's just okay for people to pull a Jean Sibelius when the amount of opportunities they have is fewer than the amount of ideas they have. Individiualism is only sustaining when you're not forced to use your desperate or leftover ideas.

I was referring to the same-but-vastly-improved gameplay, but, yeah, sure! You may not have nostalgia for it, because it's based on 1960s and 1970s comics and Tatsunoko, not Ghibli, but it captures its animation reference as well as the previous.

Question, though: are any of the game systems or mechanics strictly necessary to overcoming challenges? To me, that's what separates good ones from your average 2015 Western shooter, where every mechanic is basically just a reformulation of the same hook: exploding a dude after he notices you but before he can do