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Constitution. New players always neglect to bump up their constitution. Those extra HP will save your life.

"Best acting" awards are usually given for "most acting." So by that logic, Dinklage probably nabbed his Emmy last night. But it was far from his best performance on the show.

Facebook nothing. Kids these days are on twitter, instagram, and vine, none of which have any privacy whatsoever and broadcast posts to anyone who cares to read.

And save it to a massive archive, so if you do something interesting in the future, they can pull up everything you've said on the phone or online for the past who knows how many years.

Don't ask! The last thing we need is another storyline.

Rape scenes are triggering and can be traumatic for people who have survived rape (which is a lot of people). The victims of murder can't watch the show.

It's enjoyable junk food that tastes best if you don't think too hard about what you're eating.

This show is like fried sushi. It's similar to something that has quality, but it's actually total junk that I know I shouldn't enjoy as much as I do. It's about 200% better marathon-watched, but some of the individual hours are worse than any episode you'd get from a ho-hum network drama. It could be much better

If there isn't a 60th anniversary release of Bo Diddley's first album next year, I'm going to light things on fire.

But if we're delusional, we have no choice but to be delusional. We were fated to be delusional and we shouldn't be too upset about it, and we won't be, because we'll never know. We can never possibly know. In astrophysics there is always talk of the "observable universe" because the question of what exists outside

Also Zelda II is the most underrated NES game and I like your icon.

Who said I know everything? I don't. I've seen or read maybe 1/5 of his plays. If that. New York just gave me the opportunity to see a lot of theater, some of it Shakespeare.

I'm an empiricist, I think if things can't be observed and can never be observed and have no perceptible effect on anything then the question of their existence is inconsequential. Devise me a test where the existence of free will will alter the results. I feel the same way about the many-worlds hypothesis.

Uh, I used to live in New York and went out to a lot of theater performances and I also read a smattering of his plays in high school and college. Do I sound like I'm trying to present myself as a credentialed expert? I'm not one.

The question of free will is unconfirmable. It's like asking if there are any totally undetectable forces in the room, or unobservable dimensions, the answer is always going to be a "maybe, but it has no effect on what we can observe"

If the driver didn't have free agency and was programmed to do that, then I am programmed to hope that the judge is programmed to throw the book at him.

You need to be NICER on the INTERNET.

Because The Tempest is awesome. He put in enough work to get it exactly right. Same can't be said for all of Spacey's recent performances.

Bad comparison. I don't think Shakespeare was trying any less hard in his later works than in The Tempest than in Hamlet. Spacey has been phoning it in for a while.

Frankly I came out of Superman Returns liking the movie more than I did with any of The Usual Suspects, American Beauty, and Se7en. The Usual Suspects is a special case as it is 95% one of the best movies ever and 5% my single least favorite ending to any movie ever. But Spacey was great in all of them.