kingbeauregard--disqus
King Beauregard
kingbeauregard--disqus

This was an episode where Kara could admit where she was wrong and she put her fee-fees aside because there was work to be done. I like that Kara an awful lot. We don't see her so much on the CW because normally she doesn't make mistakes in judgment.

"I did almost wonder if the one whistleblower maybe was going to have a slightly insulting reason to go to Kara."

I laughed at "that romantic bastard!" It flirted with being inappropriately comical but didn't quite cross the line.

"Are you my mummy?"

I want to ride a little skateboard all over his head.

For $300 you could get a Ninja 3-in-1 cooker, a Ninja blender, a toaster / convection oven, and a red copper pan like they advertise on TV.

If a dog (presumably on a leash) nuzzles up against my hand I'll pet it briefly because the dog is "asking" me directly (what am I supposed to do, recoil from it like it's got cooties?), but no way will I try to get to first base with it without first talking to the owner.

To them, the asking was a mere formality, and you violated the social compact. You MONSTER!

If a person's dog, or their child, engages me, I will engage back because they started it, but then I will also acknowledge the owner.

Rachel Dolezal, at least, serves as a cautionary tale for those of us white people who really, really don't want to end up like her. Pray God I'm not one-tenth as self-absorbed as she is and am policing myself well enough to steer clear.

The interview, I think, does a good job of calling Rachel out on her insistence on dictating how she is viewed.

This just happened on "Doctor Who":

Fun interview with Rachel Dolezal:

That could be. I like to think Archer has a potentially brilliant mind, but his childhood was so devoted to coping with hell, he never developed good scholastic habits. Maybe even that was part of his coping: putting work into something is just an invitation for Mother to make you feel like shit about it. Goddamn,

I figure Archer was paying attention maybe 8% of the time in school. But he remembers every moment of that 8% freakishly well.

I think the heart of "Fargo" is the cold inhospitable wastelands, and the subtle message they press upon each scene: the only way we can survive is to take care of each other. Each season of "Fargo" asks the question, what happens when people stop working towards our common survival? That's when things spin out of

They try way too hard with Ravi. A pile of charming mannerisms is not the same thing as a character. Also I'm not persuaded that his mannerisms are charming; YMMV.

This is what I consider damn fine music: