Based on their handling of the situation on all levels, I have nothing but doubt when it comes to any determinations and decisions those creeps come to.
Based on their handling of the situation on all levels, I have nothing but doubt when it comes to any determinations and decisions those creeps come to.
Fair points.
The Takeover is a top five all-time diss record, so I think I give it a fair amount of credit. Creative middle school name calling is 75-percent of all hip hop battles, so I don't hold that against most rappers, it just bugs me when people pretend that Ether was nothing but name calling and Takeover was a dissertation…
By the time he went after Canibus, Canibus was relegated to an underground MC with no clout. Also, Canibus retaliated with "Dr. C, PHD" which was a pretty decent attack, and Eminem just ignored it. Of course, Eminem held much more clout and stood to benefit in no way from engaging Canibus on a significant level, but…
Jay-Z called Nas the "f-g model in karl kani esco ads." And then spent half the verse calling Nas a fake thug with no evidence and then talking about how he fell off even though It was Written holds up better than any Jay Z record from that era other than Reasonable Doubt. In retrospect most of Jay Z's disses look…
Takeover being more "factual" is a myth.
Takeover being more "factual" is a myth.
Psychological warfare.
And, of the two, only DudeBro Asher has anything that resembles "charisma" or "not being boring."
Honestly, against all my better judgments, I'm enjoying this series.
Sam Raimi uses voice over at the beginning of his films that never show up again, all the time. And most of those movies are pretty awesome….
Who's driving this car, Stevie Wonder?
The satire lies in the film's depiction of modern male living habits. It's satirizing both the male who cherishes his meaningless accumulations of status (i.e. job titles, brand name furniture, "comfort") as well as the extreme reaction against it (i.e. brainless, inarticulate, destructive machismo). The emotions felt…
I got the feeling that the movies was actually sympathetic to some extant with Amy. She's a monster who was created by unrealistic expectations placed on her by her parents, husband and society as a whole. She's been marginalized and used and so she's going to do the same to others.
Have you never met a boy between the ages of, like, 13 and 24? Or someone who never grew out of that stage?
Funner fact: Dan Snyder claims the fighting ring is not offensive to most Native Americans.
There isn't anyone around to "pick up the slack" because the WWE doesn't do a good job of building anyone else up. They were doing well with Daniel Bryan, but he got hurt. If you turn Cena heel and make him an unstoppable monster heel who has a dominant reign with the belt, and the only hope is a hero rising from the…
People are looking at his heel turn all wrong. You turn him into an Angle-like heel. A heel who believes he's a good guy, and who, ostensibly, is. You let him keep his "hustle, loyalty, respect" but those terms take on a new meaning with him obviously being a far more sadistic, selfish, ruthless version of himself.
They played Summerslam perfectly with Lesnar defeating Cena is what was essentially a squash match. They could've gone two legitimate directions with Cena after that. They could've made him human. They could've made him injured and psychologically scarred after such a defeat. They could've made his return to form a…
You're right. Your heroes in tights are better than my heroes in tights. Your scantily clad heroines are less misogynistic than my scantily clad heroines….