Wait, really? This was a common way to leave an online community?
Wait, really? This was a common way to leave an online community?
I went to see The Dark Knight opening day. The theater was mobbed, and it was playing on like half the screens in the multiplex that night. A co-worker of mine spotted me in the crowd and waved me over to the ticket-selling machine, asking me why Batman wasn’t on the list of movies playing.
The other funny thing I…
Well then I’m going to name my streaming service Neighbor Dashboard, so it’ll have “hbo” in it twice.
lol I was about to paste that same comment. Burn on Burton.
Take two Asprin and call me in the morning.
Ermahgerd, Ermer Wers!
Damn! I’ll have to invent that genre myself.
I’m a big fan of paranormal spy stuff
5 min before posting the Glass Onion trailer on Twitter, Rian Johnson tweeted a picture of a Yoshi egg. Teasing something? (I have no clue.)
Insane ruling. BTW, in the article image, exactly what hairy body part are these pills sitting on?
Misleading double-feature:
Barbarian (2022)
Sorcerer (1977)
5th season title for when it moves to Discover+ or whatever:
Pennyworth: Not That Evil Clown, A Different Guy
Yeah it means 50 cents.
Certainly possible. Here’s a Twitter post from December by a guy who claims to be Robin’s brother, though:
I thought “best shot” referred to a punch, not a bullet.
Asteroid City is a poetic meditation on the meaning of life.
Writer Michael Thomsen noted in a 2015 Forbes article that “Quiet’s sexualization doesn’t seem to be acknowledged by anyone in the game world. She has no expressed libido, nor do any of the game’s bumblingly inelegant men.”
Huge fan of Beck and Weird Al. I’m glad Beck didn’t allow the parody because Al’s Alternative Polka (which opens with a polka cover of Loser) is my favorite thing he ever made.
Whoa! Yeah that’s different haha.
Could you elaborate on fanny? Is it offensive in the UK? All I know is that’s a word that means “butt” that’s rarely used here in the US, but only because it’s old-fashioned/silly/British-sounding.
Adults generally use this fine alternative: