interrobangsinspeech
InterrobangsInSpeech
interrobangsinspeech

I’m a late-twenties guy who was first introduced to Spice World by a partner a few years back, and that shit is bomb.

There is weight to this, but also, if I knew it was an ethnic slur, even intellectually, I wouldn’t be using it.

There are two reasons I bemoan the increased rise of China’s prominence in large studio film consideration. One is political censure, shaping the landscape of an entertainment industry around government strict on what type of art it imports and determined to silence criticism or anything that could be perceived as

Aaaah. I read it as a passive-aggressive endnote. Like, “Jeez, why don’t you just ask me to sell everything dear to me?”

I think it’s adorable that he associates owning lots of ridiculous things with having a soul. As if it’s unconscionable he should have to sell something off or budget a bit in order to avoid bankruptcy.

Inherent Vice, which is an Anderson joint but not a Wes one, also deserves a mention. Owen Wilson’s filmography is a wild ride, but he has plenty of hits and you can’t blame him for doing his job. Hell, if the bottom half of your roles includes Zoolander, you can look back on your career fondly.

Even with lines of consent being a notoriously (legally) blurrable issue, I fail to see how the prosecution couldn’t simply begin and end on the fact that he knowingly gave Quaaludes to women without informing them on the same night he had sexual contact with them, and rest assured of a guilty verdict.

Just once of

I’ll happily sign a petition to send Mike Pence to space.

“Why?”

“Fired,” but it doesn’t quite work seamlessly coming off the last sentence, since the last-referenced person was her boss.

Even if the lines of consent were blurred in his mind (which doesn’t matter; it’s his job to be informed and empathetic about consent as a sexually active adult), getting these women fired afterward is a real shitheel thing to do.

Bobby is going to plead the fifth on what the missing word might be.

Would that be the same “reality over mythology” Christianity that’s currently saddling us with insane state laws like requiring funereal treatment for aborted fetal tissues or reducing access to single clinics? The same Christianity that’s still cited in combatting protection for gay workers and which was front and

Trump to the Pope now: “I will never forget what you told me.”

Why even say something like this? What’s the practical application?

She was killed by her father, who had for years been possessed by an evil spirit named BOB who feeds on pain and suffering (and who intended to make Laura his next vessel). I am not making this up and it is essential to the ending of the original series and to the continuation.

I’m twenty-seven and first watched TP a few years back with my then-girlfriend. I’ve been chomping at the bit to talk with more people about this! I’m more a fan of Lynch through his movies than specifically through Twin Peaks though.

Everyone should have expected this, since it’s Lynch, but horror is at the fore again and I am okay with this!

Whereas the original run took until episode three to get freaky, this one starts on the deep end and takes until episode three to return to something resembling the rhythms of normalcy.

Here’s to finding out

It’s not about reaching moderates now, but populists. Clinton lacked a message beyond “establishment,” just as Trump lacked a message beyond “anti-establishment.” A lot of people failed to realize that at the time of this election, that was the only distinction that mattered.

One of her interviewed classmates posits that “mixers” gave off a bit of a negative/low-brow image.