Wait, there was a Orson Welles frozen peas joke on Pinky and the Brain? My mind always goes back to the one from The Critic where Welles was played by LeMarche.
Wait, there was a Orson Welles frozen peas joke on Pinky and the Brain? My mind always goes back to the one from The Critic where Welles was played by LeMarche.
I'll take it. I started playing sax because of her!
I'd argue the impetus for the right to vote for women and minorities came from people working outside the system.
I'd just like to add that Gravity Falls had Patton Oswalt as a sentient Dutch golfball.
I think that might actually be a cheap Hulk mask.
You can't change the system from within, the system changes you.
Pretty sure Archer plays the fool just to fuck with people all the time, too.
Coulda sworn he mentioned in one episode the person he was /actually/ cloned from.
Well, it would stop their plans for selling her eyes. That's about it, though. And before you say they could still take her other one, c'mon now… eyes gotta be sold as pairs.
"Let the bears pay the bear tax, I pay the Homer tax!"
"That's the home OWNER tax!"
Who's going to sing Tom Waits songs for us now?
…Batman?
I'd say it's getting positive reviews because it's a fun experience that's been solidly crafted both mechanically and aesthetically. Me, I like the writing too, but that's entirely subjective.
Explaining it as "everything doesn't matter" is a bit of a glib description. You know the theory that the entire universe expanded from a single point, and will then contract back to that one single unmeasurable point of matter? That's what the Zero Theorem is about.
The pilot is pretty weak, but it gets pretty enjoyable a bit further down. Hell of a lot better than The Awesomes at the very least.
He got a gig as the head editor (or something) over at The Escapist, he left Destructoid at that point.
It's almost like they didn't even TRY to approach realism.
I do believe the abrupt ending/lack of resolution was a direct reference to Zodiac.