koalajohnson--disqus
KoalaJohnson
koalajohnson--disqus

It's debatable, and again, largely based off of what we the viewers were shown by the filmmakers. The point I'm trying to make is that while I do believe that the documentary makes a compelling argument for the idea that the trial was unfair and mishandled, and even that Avery and Brendan are innocent, it is still

The change.org petition to pardon Avery immediately is ridiculous, as we still do not know if he is guilty or not, regardless of the sympathetic leanings of the documentary. The filmmakers themselves have claimed they don't know the truth. A smarter petition would have been to ask for a retrial for Avery, preferably

After watching the series, I tried to keep in mind how the documentarian's personal bias and obvious sympathizing with Avery and his family would color the way I interpreted the evidence presented to the viewer. In conclusion I do not know if Avery is innocent, but I do believe that both he and his nephew deserve a

Maybe I'm missing something, but I thought you hear Finn's voice in both Trailer 3 and the Japanese Trailer 4. Am I wrong here?

Interesting that people are saying this is like a reverse-Star Trek, which I can totally see. When I saw this first episode, in fact the first scene of this first episode, I immediately thought of reverse-Star Wars, where the Rebellion loses to the Empire. The Mal - Han Solo similarity helped that I think. Like this

Interesting that people are saying this is like a reverse-Star Trek, which I can totally see. When I saw this first episode, in fact the first scene of this first episode, I immediately thought of reverse-Star Wars, where the Rebellion loses to the Empire. The Mal - Han Solo similarity helped that I think. Like this

What a backhanded compliment of a review.

I thought we found out that Krusty was Jewish in the Season 3 episode "Like Father, Like Clown?"

33 anti-woman comments in the span of 3 hours. 33. I hope you're just trolling to rile people up, and at least have some level of self-awareness. If not, I think you need to take a long, hard look at yourself and figure out where all of this anger is coming from. My money is on sexual frustration and fear.

Oooohhhhh, I get it. Well yeah I agree, definitely not a shipping fan either. Classic Who had no shipping! That's awesome that your daughter's into the show. If I ever have kids, they will also be inducted into the cult at a young age. :-)

Awwwww snap. You're old-school? Me too! Started watching the Pertwee, and then Baker episodes on Channel 11 WTTW Chicago with my dad when I was 5. Life-long classic Who fan. Enjoy the new episodes up to a point, not a fan of Davies' insane season finales or Moffat's era in general (although I like Matt Smith).

So let me get this straight: When this Star Wars film does eventually come out, you honestly believe that it will have more than one new female lead protagonist, and they will not be under-written, under-developed, and primarily used as a love interest characters, sex symbols, or damsel in distress, and that the cast

I haven't seen much of his other work, aside from the majority of one of the seasons of Lost, which did definitely have many well-developed female characters, and Cloverfield (he produced), which also had two prominent female protagonists. I am aware and do agree that he has done many projects before with

That's too bad. I know TONS of girl nerds who are huge on the sci-fi/fantasy genre (Can I get a shout out from the Doctor Who fangirls? Please?). As for Uhura, yes, she was underutilized on the show and in the movies, plus she had an absurdly short skirt as part of her official uniform, but she was also significant

That's a good point. His TV shows did have a better handle on female characters. I just don't understand why his Star Trek/Star Wars casts are SO disproportionate, especially when the current hot trend does seem to be leaning towards creating strong, fully-fleshed female protagonists in the fantasy and action genres

J. J. Abrams is likely listening, but not really understanding or doesn't care. Unfortunately, I predict that this sole new female character will be used much the same way that Uhura is in the new Star Trek movies: As a two-dimensional, "strong" (emphasis on the quotes) woman with essentially no meaningful impact on