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jcupach

and Cleveland has been there-done that

Still need an apology from the writers for that ending though.

“Live from this White Guy’s GoPro, we’ve found a cop in his natural habitat. It appears he has found his prey: a successful black man going about his day. Behold the change in the officer’s stance, the posturing, the preening, the-oh shit, SHOTS FIRED!”

He looks stupid without the trunks. It’s like taking the torch out of the Statue of Liberty’s hand and giving her a bag of Doritos.

Looks like they’ve fallen

As a Brown’s fan, I say keep him away. There’s only misery here.

I look forward to continuity mistakes being blamed on the reader for caring too much about a comic book.

As of right now, I would rank it just ahead of The Star Wars Christmas Special, but not quite at the level of The Ewok Adventure. Maybe if I just focus on the Rey / Ren stuff, and ignore pretty much everything else, I could see liking it better than A Phantom Menace. But no way will it climb higher then The Battle for

even if it is justified.

And that is exactly what I’m afraid of. I hate that they gave the last movie to Abrams, because the guy has no idea how to end a story in a satisfying way. On top of that, I feel that there’s the possibility he would change what Rian Johnson did with her lineage.

“That’s kind of the fun stuff you can get into a novel that you can’t always get onto the screen.”

Three issues: First having her first use of the force in the long saga be completely self-serving is kind of weak, especially when other characters’ big uses have largely been motivated by interpersonal or geopolitical factors. Next is that there really wasn’t any narrative point or purpose to the scene, as she

America was a horrible story. That’s why it didn’t sell, not because she wasn’t a white male, but because her story felt lazily written and boring.

Just Ranting

So the Red Sox are still stealing signs then?

I will never, EVER understand to desire to see (once) unique comic book characters essentially copied over and over until there is little to nothing unique about any of them.

It’ll be the hottest storyline of 1993!

"First," says the logician, "the product of my children's ages is 36."