I would doubt that even this is the full scope of his victims. However, people in the public eye are much more likely to draw fixation from the occasional person suffering from psychotic delusion.
I would doubt that even this is the full scope of his victims. However, people in the public eye are much more likely to draw fixation from the occasional person suffering from psychotic delusion.
Yeah, I found it to be a net positive experience as a guy. I've seen a lot of complainers whose profiles were just laundry lists of likes and dislikes set to the tune of a few shitty jokes, instead of giving the reader a sense of what it might actually be like to spend five minutes in a room with you.
I feel the opposite. When you're cooking you can wing it, improvise, tweak it as many times as you need. I mean, I guess baking is easier in that it's a matter of strict adherence to the directions, but I find that a lot more stressful than comforting.
…Have we really found that rarest of creatures, a fan of Fat Lee Adama?
Xenocide refers to killing the lead singer of Cheap Trick.
I would never hurt you, Friend—but I'm about to shoot where you stand.
I want Jim Beaver for Wednesday.
Parp.
Diversity does include sexuality, religion, nationality, SES, etc. There are murderers and pacifists, soldiers and survivors of domestic abuse, senators and farmers…
Carnivale could have turned that into a fireball show.
I did start to wonder if Newton had failed to discover some kind of Law of Conservation of Morally Decent Black Men. But seriously, their diversity goes a lot further than race and into religion, class, and sexuality.
It has also had homosexual characters, as well as characters that are very young or very old, or physically disabled. It's had the formerly wealthy, the rural poor, the urban poor, those of religious belief and those not. The first two seasons aside, it really has become a show with an impressive track record on…
**SPOILERS**
I took the question as sarcastic.
You didn't miss it. He had it at the end of the previous season's finale. Almost all of them have changed their hair significantly, but Ragnar's is now short, Bjorn's is now long, and Floki's is… altered.
Tyrol is the Chief O'Brien of Galactica. Seems like every week they find a new way to torture him.
Bear McCreary's "Roslin and Adama" piece played in that scene is absolutely beautiful. My girlfriend teaches violin, and she and some of her students performed it at a recital for a change of pace.
I've been to several concerts where the bands had such a rule. Typically it's enforced by having security remove the person if they see someone holding up the camera for more than a few seconds.
*Insert reference to Hamsterdam from The Wire*
"That's what she said" has almost never been funny in any era, really. What works a lot better in its place is a sigh and an ashamed "She never said that."