kumagorok
Kumagoro
kumagorok

“we had this funny idea of characters riding giant sperm, but then we had to figure out how we were going to do that.”

Written by the great David Mirkin himself, The Simpsons’ best showrunner ever.

Hey, 2001 was 20 years ago now! And still no giant space baby?

I dont mean that in a “Dan Harmon is a piece of shit” way

the incestuous offspring of Morty and Summer

Ask Pee-Wee Herman.

It’s no surprising with genetically identicals. You can also recognize some sort of muscle memory in her action scenes.

Olga Kurylenko’s *not* uncredited! Combining her name being in the opening credits with Taskmaster obviously being the main villain’s daughter from the first time she’s mentioned to an actress of her profile continuing to not appear in the film after her name was in said credits made it obvious she was Taskmaster.

You mean she is the clone of Milla that she has to present to the world as her daughter.

the idea of setting Hawkeye up as a bad guy

That’ll give Hawkeye two of the best actresses of their generation in Hailee Steinfeld and Florence Pugh.

she literally has no personality in this movie by design

But they’re wacky relationship dramas!

Why does our Loki know how to take on an Alioth after being in this world for three minutes

It has to be a multiverse by the rules exposed in Endgame, otherwise the TVA wouldn’t have allowed Cap to go back and live out his life with Peggy in a different branch, as it was later established in interviews (give or take the semi-paradox of him coming back as an old man in the prime timeline, which has been

I think he was sleeping when Dooley came, looked at him, and thought, “Might as well shoot him. He’s a POC, and we don’t want any of those around for the finale.”

i don’t remember dead scott being in booya moon in the book at all. i don’t understand how that works - it just opens up a whole can of worms.

One of the elements that most terrorize me in Lisey’s Story, particularly this episode, is being faced with the sheer fact that Stephen King considers his books highbrow, salvific literature.

The issue might be that this is not entirely his show, not the way Community was (well, until they took it away from him then gave it back). And I might be wrong, but I think Roiland is not really interested in that kind of emotional/psychological side. He just wants to do hard sci-fi with an outrageous norm-defying

I only now realized the Long Boy is made of people! Is that King paying homage to “In the Hills, the Cities” by his longtime frenemy Clive Barker?