jallured1
jallured1
jallured1

Proof that someone can simultaneously have phenomenal and awful instincts. Thinking to engage Gerwig to write/direct? Brilliant. Tapping Gadot as Barbie? WTF are you smoking? 

If this film fails, I hope people properly blame the genre, not the cultural backgrounds of its leads and creative team. But, whatever happens, it’s not as if Gunn-Safran will be hostile to inclusive films, TV, etc.

We call it “going full Caviezel.”

Collectively we’re becoming the smartest and dumbest we’ve ever been as a species. It’s wild stuff. 

Ali G and Borat were truly breakthrough bits of comedy in their day — that late 90s/early aughts era typified by clueless/casually mean characters that elicited laughs from an audience who recognized their awfulness (that was the whole joke!). The original (and even American) Office is another perfect example.

Calm down, everyone, Elon Musk is just looking out for the fertility of trans people. That’s definitely what all his vitriol is about. HELPING people. 

The million typing monkeys in his brain finally landed on something.

I don’t even know what Dr. Vegas is but I feel like I should consumer some edibles and watch it ASAP. 

Neither Sheen nor Lowe were “the star.” Sheen would go large swaths offscreen. It truly became more of an ensemble cast, with the president and his staffers sharing the spotlight. At no point was a single star really the main focus, though maybe that had been the original plan. I see the Sopranos mentioned here, but

I think that (largely) I’m thinking of high concept comedies that can be done for a modest budget. A lot of these would likely be mashups. As others have said, if horror fans are drawn by the genre itself, maybe a comedy Blumhouse basically makes the concepts the draw — Ferris Bueller x Hot Tub Time Machine (that

Comedy and horror both benefit from live audiences — bringing an extra level of energy to the experience. Yet only horror is thriving. Is it that comedy tastes are too fragmented while horror fandom is less so? Or is it as simple as horror benefitting from the heightened audio/visual experience of a theater (similar

Solid stuff. 

I think two things can be true. “The man” absolutely unfairly squashes fair use and uses overlong copyright to squeeze value out of things that have richly rewarded original rights holders many times over. Yet it’s also true that authors and other creators are getting casually screwed by people who mistake

If you’re talking about a commercial assignment, sure, word counts are where you begin (especially if word counts are tied to payouts). A creative work like a memoir functions completely differently. No writer of merit ever began with “hmmm, what should the word count target be?” Except cases like Dickens — and only

Does anyone understand the difference between legal due process and just, like, people’s opinions? They are not the same, silly! One has the weight of serious consequences, including financial penalties, incarceration or even death. The other is...opinions.

Sorry, he will always have my heart for his classic line in Barfly: “I wouldn’t want to be you if I was me.”

This isn’t luddism; it’s about control over intellectual works. Buying books does not give the purchaser ownership rights over the content. Anymore than buying an iPhone gives you ownership of the design specs. You want to train a platform (for profit or not) on my work? 1) Ask my permission. 2) Pay me.

It is not personal if it’s accessible online. 

the first step to writing a book was determining how many words are in most books.” That is exactly how a robot would (wrongly) assume how to begin a creative project. 

I love this film but do we need a Groundhog Day 2? This film’s conceit and execution was perfect. More will just be...more.