jeffdworkin--disqus
To Engineer is Human
jeffdworkin--disqus

The author has not done her homework. Any aficionado knows that Romero zombies did not have an appetite for 'brains'. That was from the semi-comic punk zombie movie 'Return of the Living Dead' from 1985. <edit> Apologies for not reading ahead - this was captured hours ago.

The ISS has a Soyuz capsule attached to one of the docking ports as an emergency lifeboat.

Ad hominem is the lowest form of argument. Prove your point with examples and reason !

Interesting point - do you wanna go fast (meth) or slow (cholesterol) :-)

Think about that a little more when you remember the scenes of the meth heads and how they live. He certainly has no caring for them.

I would have to scan a lot of BB episodes, but I'm pretty sure there is a scene where Hector is confronted in the nursing home by Gus Fring where he implies that he was the one who caused him to be crippled.

There, there Porky fear not for you are liked.

Wow, first I heard that Lancelot dies in this. So in other words the entire reason for the tragedy of the story (the secret love of Lancelot and Guinnivere and how it divides the knights of the RT). So in essence the same kind of thinking that went into the making of 'World War Z' - we'll use the cool title of a

The 'Intro' to Lou Reed's live masterpiece "Rock & Roll Animal" with dualing guitars by Steve Hunter and Rick Wagner.

'Supposedly' ? Don't be an idiot. Just talk to an older person like myself who lived through that entire time.

He appears in court and at the police stations multiple times in 'Breaking Bad' so he must have a law license as Saul Goodman.

I don't think you are correct about Gus's point in time - his hatred of Hector here makes me think that this is happening after the poolside murder of his partner by Hector, but clearly before Walter White comes on the scene.

Close but no cigar (unless legal in your state). Mrs. Naismith invented White-Out not the Post-It note.

For me it was the thankfully forgotten 1988 "Dead Heat" with Joe Piscopo and Treat Williams. This is the film that singlehandedly ended the 'mismatched buddy cop' movie fad that began with '48 Hrs' (Eddie Murphy and Nick Nolte).

At what point in his career was Lawrence of Arabia an archeologist - he was a British officer, intelligence agent, and one of the behind the scenes manipulators of the situation during WWI that led inexorably toward the current mess over there. This book has the goods on the whole story - how a bunch of

Well no, but the phony/comic NY setting is too jarring whenever it becomes that obvious, it throws you out of the moment.

There was also a huge suspension of disbelief problem for New Yorkers or almost anyone who has ever been to the Bronx with the snow-capped mountains of Vancouver off in the distance behind many of the street scenes.

Which illustrates the dangerous stupidity you espouse. This is a constitutional republic ruled by laws. You don't get to 'impose' anything just because you won an election. That's the very dictatorial fascism we are warning against. The total lack of rational thinking and the childish name calling are all part of

The never ending argument between 'method' actors who have to actually get emotionally involved (Brando) and technically proficient acting professionals (Edward G. Robinson).