kinjagoogoo
kinjagoogoo
kinjagoogoo

We're used to it. Road works and all.

Meanwhile at the bottom of the slide :

...The blocks load incredibly slow on my machine that has a SSD and a GTX760...

I like the episodic nature exactly because i don't have time! They release an episode, I play for a few hours on a weekend and i feel like i succeeded and had by itself an enjoyable good chunk of the story. I hate playing a long game and feeling like i'm stuck in the middle of it for weeks or even months.
But i do

That my opinions are secretly facts.

This has basically nothing to do with this post, but...

There is a Subway two blocks from my office, one block from my office, and half a block from my office. You can see the other two Subway shops from the front door of any of the three. It's ridiculous. I'm pretty sure if a restaurant space opens it will soon host a fourth Subway.

My issue isn't with "expressing opinions", it's with people's response to his overall message simply because it was framed by the Donald Sterling drama.

It's sad that you have to resort to explaining this multiple times, and still people don't grasp the concept.

I'm not saying I lose the right to express my opinion; I'm saying that as a public figure, I have to expect that everything I say publicly can reflect upon Kotaku in some way.

I have 10k followers on Twitter; when I say something there, it's not just voicing an opinion—it's broadcasting that opinion to an audience of thousands. If I got in front of a room full of 10,000 people and shouted racial slurs, I might not be arrested—because I have the right to say whatever I'd like—but I sure

When you work in a public-facing field like community management, the lines between personal and work-related Twitter accounts are blurred. If I were to say something racist or offensive on my personal account, for example, it'd be represented as "Kotaku writer Jason Schreier says something racist!" not "individual

I won't cast judgement as to whether he should or shouldn't have been fired, but when you're a public figure on Twitter with thousands of followers (142k, in his case), your tweets aren't just "expressing opinion" - they're public statements that often do represent your employer, especially when you've got a

And Turtle Rock has the right as an American company to fire you for supporting such foolishness.

Earlier today a kid (maybe 13ish) asked me to get a game out of our cabinet for him (I'm temporarily working at target). He walks me over and I ask him which game he wants, and he REALLY sheepishly says "Pokemon Y" and tries to sort of hide it behind a laugh and an that awkward standing dance you do when you're

shouldn't be embarrassed until you're marrying a body pillow. Then you have to wonder where you made a wrong turn in your life.

Every guy you (a woman) asked SAID they would love it?

I'm glad your friend was doing it in fun, but how does that change how ridiculous Wendy Williams' response is?

Mr. Freude and I have one kid and another on the way, so I know this: Deciding to add to your family will drastically change your finances, your love life, your free time, your hobbies, your relationship with your friends, your thoughts about life, your eating habits, your sanity, and your sleep. To make the decision

More than an effect on time, finances, and trust - that's bordering on reproductive abuse. Nobody is entitled to force anyone's hand in terms of their autonomy over their body. Wendy Williams, you have fucked up royally.