jonathanwinterscoming--disqus
Man with a robot arm
jonathanwinterscoming--disqus

I liked AOTS and their Comic-Con coverage. You can't really see that kind of coverage anywhere else now. Spike has an hour at 2 am set in a hallway, it's nothing like the creator and celebfest that G4 had on the main floor. Alison Haislip and Blair Butler seemed genuinely interested in what they were doing.

The one for NBC's ?mid 60's? line-up is way fucking dense.

I always heard this and like the take on it. I've also read in addition to Walker being a ghost so could Keenan Wynn's Yost. There never seems to be other characters on screen when Yost is around or they take no notice of him. Yost and Walker hardly ever look at each other as Yost seems to always be behind Walker,

Lawrence Tierney.

Too bad he and Roger Ebert never collaborated. It would have been mind blowing.

The kosher meal tastes the same, on the ground or in the air.

It's true you don't see many dwarf women. And in fact, they are so
alike in voice and appearance, that they are often mistaken for dwarf
men.

It still seems a very original work to me. Ennis' dialog is very readable, and realistic. Dillion's artwork has moments of over-the-top gore and violence, some hilarious and some frightening. For lack of a better term, it's bat shit insane in parts. But Dillion and Ennis also give quieter character moments. Some of

Saga, of course. Also, started Preacher. I got into it around #30 or so when it was first being published but never read the whole thing straight through until now.

Thank you. That search was very informative.

@avclub-9024f9f0a80d2d248c7c6efb2e715c37:disqus Does anyone use, forgive me if I'm not using the correct terms, 1e still? I'm talking about the blue Basic set (we had to pick chits out of a cup instead of dice back then), Players Handbook, DM Guide, and Monster Manual from the late 70's and early 80's? Or even the, I

JFK really showed some brains.

I would add most of Sidney Lumet's output from that decade to the list as well.

Love and Rockets #24 is still one of the all-time great covers. Crisp and clean yet portraying the dynamic punk lifestyle of the characters. It's got everything Jaime does so well. Look at that audience. The variety of faces he can draw with such a clean line is amazing.

Darnielle may want to read Heller's epic take down of Xanth and A Spell For Chameleon in particular before reading it.

Wally Wood's Cannon. It's like if Patrick McGoohan's Danger Man was produced by Russ Meyer. Very good.

Cool, so what do you say we climb a rock manyana?

Bushes in the seventies were pretty strong. They could flip cars. They don't grow bushes like that anymore.

I hate when two motorcycles ride side-by-side CHiPS-style. It's so dangerous. I mean what if one has to swerve out of the way? Thanks for swerving into my car, jackass. They can't talk to each other while doing seventy down the highway. I see it all the time. Crazy.

[Replaces Irish with Mexican.]