lemonshapedrock--disqus
Lemon-Shaped Rock
lemonshapedrock--disqus

Ha, I unironically love pretty much everything about the whole Middle Earth legendarium, Tom Bombadil included, but I get why people don't like him.

It's fine, I guess. I blew through them when I read them as a kid, and re-reading them as an adult they were still just as hard to put down. But I don't feel any sort of lasting emotional connection to them the way I do with books I love. I read LOTR just before I read Harry Potter, and that's stuck with me in a

I like Leinenkugel, but not as a beer.

I haven't watched the show either, but I struggled with thoughts of suicide and self-harm through adolescence (and still do, sometimes), and depictions of those things can still act as a trigger for me. Even if the depiction doesn't glorify suicide or self-harm, it can still be a trigger. For example, when I saw The

They've got colored teeth like Johnny and exude a vicious disposition.

Her $200 true daily double was fantastic, I laughed out loud. I hope someday I can make a $0 true daily double, just to see the reaction here.

He probably just watched the first 10 minutes.

It can be two things Lisa needs braces dental plan!

You can't include The Cabin in the Woods and not include Tucker and Dale vs. Evil. Sure, it's more comedy than horror, but Cabin in the Woods wasn't very scary either.

I thought the Final Jeopardy was ridiculously easy, although growing up in the Bible Belt might have helped a bit.

I watched both and thought they were awesome at the time. I've never felt a need to re-watch them though.

The sports questions were painful. I know sports isn't typically a strong area for most contestants, but for no one to know either Roger Clemens or Maurice Richard was pretty disappointing.

X = 10
I = 1
XI = 11.

The aides/AIDS mixup is a lot more understandable, and Jared's explanation is a lot less convincing.

The entire lineup of 90sFest?

Start at season 3, the consensus beginning of the "Golden Age". Some people say it began in season 2, but they're wrong.

I'd forgotten about those two incidents. I've never been a fan of the Buggalo episode, and I didn't want to rewatch this movie.

I guess it depends on how it's used. Apu, for example, is a character with a stereotypical Indian accent performed by a non-Indian voice actor, but his accent makes sense for a character who is an immigrant and whose immigrant background has been used as a basis for stories that deepen the character.

So in this case, "worse than Hitler" isn't hyperbole?

I believe the diocese takes a percentage (some of which probably trickles up to the Vatican), the rest goes towards paying bills/staff for the church, and whatever is left after that goes to the services/charities the church runs.