larrychoiceman
larrychoiceman
larrychoiceman

While other comments have more than adequately flamed the author into oblivion for such an inane article, I would like to do a bit o’ reaming on account of ye olde English language here.
The following is not correct usage of ‘begging the question’. It does not mean, nor has it ever meant, ‘raises the question’. It

This has been a fascinating discussion, truly. It would never occur to me to throw away naked pictures of an ex-. It’d be part of my memories of our time together, and those memories are things that I would treasure because the relationship was a part of *my* life that I might want to revisit from time to time. Not

That is an absolutely fantastic idea for a film. I am totally serious. It’s like Lost In La Mancha meets Episodes meets Tropic Thunder.

I’m curious as to why. I’m not intending to come off as a troll and hope that I’m not, but isn’t it a risk that everyone takes: of not being found attractive is some way and then rejected? Why does that warrant blocking? (I really want to know, because his advice seems totally reasonable to me, but I’m no dating

Isn’t the move having her have been involuntarily committed and the whole remainder of the show is her family trying to move on and piece their lives back together? Metaphorical resonances abound, re: America!

Yo, you do get that what Walker did (ugh) was basically the Jezebel equivalent of catcalling, right? Like, Singal might be a prize asshole, and HORRIBLE on trans issues, but the point is that they’re going about their business, doing their job to the best of their abilities, and Herron approaches them, basically

Don’t. WRITE. THIS stuff. That’s the whole game. If Mike Pence refuses to stand for the Korea anthem, and means it as a show of disrespect, then he is wresting control of the narrative, i.e. that not standing for the flag means that you don’t respect the country it stands for. (Which is what the idiot conservatives

Just a note, Soylent was originally from a 1966 book by Harry Harrison called “Make Room! Make Room!” Therein, Soylent was portmanteau of ‘soy’ and ‘lentil’. The later movie (“Soylent Green”) took a bunch of liberties with the original source material, e.g. that soylent was [spoiler alert] made of people.
Basically,