maththemath--disqus
maththemath
maththemath--disqus

At least they won't be getting their bone on.

Most of them are criminals and other working class folk. Not really many thinkers there.

i made a post about this two seconds ago. you beat me to it.

WHOA. I just realized that this gumball guardian serves the same purpose as the robot the businessmen made in "Business Time" back in season one.

She's used to it by now, I'm sure. Plus, high chance that PB is still alive.

The Simpsons didn't have the brilliant gag of thinking of a sandwich when trying NOT to think of a sandwich.

So does anyone else think it's fucking disturbing that Starchie is trying to run the fuck away and get rid of his tracker in a convincing fake death? The fuck is going on there?

I'm really perplexed by this assessment, just really perplexed! You know how this is a comedy show sometimes? This is like the most I've laughed at Adventure Time in a while.

This episode even laughs at Oliver! He's Finn and Jake not getting it!

Philosophically dense? Like when Chips trips over the turtle? Makes me think about the fragility of my own life.

I'd like to point out that my Goku metaphor becomes even more relevant in DBZ, when the show suddenly forgets to keep establishing why Goku gives any number of fucks about the world.

So maybe this didn't work that much for you, or at least you don't care about it. That's cool. But can we at least drop the whole "filler" thing? Because these filled spaces are essential. This isn't exactly Goku getting his driver's license.

I always disagree with you about episodes like this, Oliver.

But the difference is that at least he KNEW that, you know? With Tysha, he was robbed of knowing Tysha loved him. Tywin robbed Tyrion of knowing he was loved. That's another level.

In the books I actually teared up a bit. It wasn't about his father stealing his girl, it was about his father robbing him of the notion that somebody loved him, too. That was heartbreaking in a way that would have made for this slam dunk season finale. I'm really confused that they didn't go for that.

I mean, I'm not sure how they would have done the dialogue. It just seems kind of important to establish, because Tyrion realizing that once upon a time, someone did in fact love him, and his father tricked him into thinking that wasn't the case…that's kind of a huge dramatic moment that I'm still really sad they

He is, but why is his escape route through the Red Keep? It's not really teed up in the show and it's just kinda like "uh what is he doing in his dad's room, uh, okay?"

Okay, I get that. Let me break my argument down in a better way.

It's not just this in particular, it's just them balking at stuff that's handed to them.

I'm not even a fantasy nerd, man. I'm not even complaining about the line but just a recurring theme of the way the showrunners basically turn down good material that we /do/ know is there.