I think you mean “taut.” ;-)
I think you mean “taut.” ;-)
Are you dictating your post here?
Unless there’s a special kind of file that’s named “nearly.”
Animals of all kinds are good at this fill.
“who will be lead by Ben Mendelsohn’s villainous Talos.”
Funny! But, it says Clooney is the drone specialist who suspects “his lover is not who she appears to be.”
I believe you mean “principal” shooting has begun.
I wonder if it’s possible to figure out how fast the Corvette was going by looking at its reflection in the door at :07.
“Breath” is the noun, “breathe” is the verb. :-)
A typo in “mistakenly.” Ironic.
In the sentence containing, “...including a company lead by the Deavors,...” I believe you meant to write “led,” and not “lead.”
Grammar peeve, sorry: “–which lead to a ratings spike.” should be “led” to a ratings spike.
When a movie is first shown, it’s a premiere, not a premier.
Cool car!
“...lead by Cate Blanchett’s Hela, the Goddess of Death, rather than Loki...”
Michael, Thanks for your concern. The advice to tape up your windows is not correct, though See: https://www.cbsnews.com/news/hurricane-experts-stop-taping-windows-for-storms/.
Myth debunked: http://www.snopes.com/business/misxlate/nova.asp
Not sure what you mean—steering at speed has a lot to do with the handlebars. To go left, you push on the left handlebar (sounds counter-intuitive, I know, but it’s called countersteering), and the faster you go, the harder you have to push to turn.
Thanks for the article. I believe you want “flair” in the sentence: “...a hyper-modern flare that verges on industrial.”
Thanks for the article. “Led” is the word you want in: “(lead by Sylvester Stallone’s Stakar).”