Also, according to IMDB, he wrote a draft of Superman Lives, the Tim Burton version that never got made.
Also, according to IMDB, he wrote a draft of Superman Lives, the Tim Burton version that never got made.
Being able to get divorced is actually a big deal for gay couples. Previously, when an unmarried gay couple with kids split up, it might've been that only one of them was legally recognized as the parent, meaning that the other had no legal standing for visitation rights and the such.
It's basically the same schedule as Real Time with Bill Maher, so I'm guessing HBO was behind it. Maybe they just don't want to pay for more episodes.
The interview isn't in the magazine. It's an internet exclusive for their website.
A Christmas Carol is on Netflix Streaming right now, at least in the US. It's tagged on as "Episode 14" of Series 5.
Missy mentions that she needed to give The Doctor a companion that would eventually push The Doctor to "go to hell" aka seek out the afterlife and thus encounter Missy. It doesn't make the most sense, since there seems like other ways to get The Doctor's attention, but then again, "bananas."
Danny was still on the slab in the morgue, so it's pretty much a certainty it's set in present day, unless you want to imagine Clara and Danny being together for years before she tells him she loves him.
He actually saw "Them" first, so the grades of both of these could be tempered by that viewing.
This article buried the lede: Shatner live tweets Castle? OMG.
I actually just bought and ate a Russel Stover Big Bite S'mores Bar last night:
http://www.candyblog.net/bl…
If they were soft shortbread, fudge filled cookies, then they were Keebler's Magic Middles:
http://www.complex.com/city…
It wasn't used to refer to an object of affection 700 years ago, however you asked about it's use as a noun, and there's other noun usages of the word crush, such as "a vast crowd of persons or things, 1806," and "(Cookery) a drink or pulp prepared by or as if by crushing fruit: orange crush." The date of earliest…
I was trying to be as verbose as you. i failed though, my last post was only half the length of the one you wrote right before it.
It looks like I struck a nerve. I'll acknowledge you "making perfect sense" as soon as you start doing so. To be fair though, I don't think anyone usually makes *perfect* sense when communicating, even myself. As for your use of English, you appear to use it fine. I'm objecting more to your specific use of one term,…
I'm sorry, but even looking up the Modern Greek definition, It's still coming back with definitions like "perplexiion" "desititution, " and "[to] wonder".
http://en.wiktionary.org/wi…
Using an Ancient Greek word doesn't make you any less wrong. You also used the word ἀπορία wrong. It's like you tried to find the most pretentious way to say "impass" via a thesaurus, and used it without looking up its meaning:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wik…
You're reasoning is getting really muddled. You seem to think it's ok to misuse a word as long as you use qualifiers like "almost," and "kinda." You also disparaged my original definition of "out of the blue," while adopting as your own a definition that uses "suddenly enters."
I didn't respond to your original comment, I responded to this: "essentially what I meant was I don't like the deus/nasus ex machina ending." If you're saying it's not a deus ex machina, then we're in agreement.
I like episode three if only for the line "I think I got your mail."
"I feel like none of these people should be out in the field."