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Joffrey's misfortune in the last episode didn't really make me feel very happy, at least not as much as some people, judging from the reaction videos on YouTube. I was more busy feeling sorry for Tyrion. The moment that golden-haired bastard started choking, I knew people would pin it on our favorite Imp. That plus

Actually had quite a lot of fun with Enter the Matrix. It could've been a lot more awesome, but at least I felt like I was in the Matrix universe a couple of times.

This for combination with headlights, which is clearly visible in the various pictures. They also seem to be mostly geared towards reducing the massive number of streetlights lining highways (which we have a lot of). The paint combined with headlights means you can have the same kind of road visibility without

While I still detest the Theon-Ramsey scenes of last season for being unnecessarily long and boring (another week, another way of torture, ughh...) it did help sell the Reek storyline, which I'm very much enjoying so far.

Yes. In general, a lot of alternative history and present day/near-future science fiction needs the documentary treatment.

But the advantage of wearable is its hands-free and you can keep an eye on your patient while the info is displayed within your field of view.

With or without the beard?

Nurse Chapel, played by the wife of Gene Roddenberry (the creator) who appears in some episodes. She also voices the computers in the subsequent Star Trek TV shows (TNG, DS9, etc.). The redshirt is Scotty, the chief engineer.

I'd say so. As with every launch, the number of games is so small that a good game like TF becomes a system seller. If everything is on the console you own, you're going to be less inclined to buy it at launch.

Space is a great place to go to because it's so hard. It requires a different line of thinking that our safe little environment back here just doesn't. That leads to innovations that benefit Earth as well.

The scene above (with the non-cardboard effects) is probably one of the best introductions in film. The music and the acting perfectly transfers feelings of excitement and amazement to the viewer before rewarding him with special effects truly ahead of its time (after twenty years it still doesn't half bad).

Ah, who hasn't wished flying a helicopter through the Moon's famous atmosphere.

Since the modernization of Japan there had been two competing groups in the Japanese military. One group argued that Japan should expand to the north, in Manchuria and Siberia. The other one, the Southern Strike group, insisted that Japan's fortunes lay to the south: the Pacific Rim and Southeast Asia. The dominance

The most crazy story about planning for the future I ever read was a story in a regional paper about how we there wouldn't be talk of a second railroad track on a local railroad line until at least 2080. What? That's like 1930-2010.

I like the age of the Drake Equation. It was made in 1959, when we new squat about exoplanets, much of our own Solar System, the composition of the Milky Way, other galaxies, etc. Everything is raising the number of us being the 1 in ? chance of life. The large the number gets, the less believable it becomes that

Why are films, which you make, not a waste of time (or less) and TV is. I imagine you might be right, in that today's television isn't naturally the movie killer it's being made out to be with True Detective, Game of Thrones, etc., but I wonder why you make a blanket statement about TV like that, since you obviously

The Walking Dead does cold opens so well, it's hard to choose. The one that I re-watched immediately after the episode was the one from 'Seed', so I'll go with that one. After a season characterized as boring, slow, overly talkative and full of bad character decisions, we get this cold open to the Season 3 premiere:

I don't think I've ever seen such a creepy rendition of humans. The rest of the art style is perfect though. Reminds me of the games EDGE and Wonderputt.

I think his point was that 80s Punisher and all those other movies were worse than Captain America.

The irony is that in the end much keeping the Saturn and Apollo would've been much cheaper (or at the same price far more versatile). The administration jumped on the cheapest option but in the end that resulted in the costlier one.