moonybear
moonybear
moonybear

As I recall, the last worker was told that one more group was up there and to wait from them, and then another group came down first.

Javaris Jamar Javarison Lamar

Bank robbery scheme turned into a job at the bank. But they are all so, so good! “Not a fork, not a spoon, something inbetween ... a Fo-poon!”

A-a-ron, because I know so many teachers that it’s not even satire.

that isn’t a scary or even particularly upsetting episode.

And the end credits scene? We find out the entire 10 year MCU was a Tide ad.

What if... IT WAS EARTH ALL ALONG!!!!???

“ After the fight with Hulk, Thor is nursed back to health by four women. Two of them are played by Waititi and Hemsworth’s wives, Chelsea Winstanley and Elsa Pataky.”

I mean, Chris Pine is RIGHT THERE.

Absolutely. I loved this book. Strangely enough, I read the others as well, and the book about the twins was my second favorite.

My copy currently sits next to the Narnia series, another one with overtly Christian themes.

A Wrinkle in Time was my favorite novel as a child and even though I was a boy, I still identified with Meg far more than any of the male characters. That she is being portrayed as biracial in the movie just makes her even more relatable to me as a mixed-race p.o.c.

A Wrinkle in Time (and the rest of that series) are treasures for a lot of reasons, and one of those is the overtly Christian worldview. The church in America has a pretty fraught relationship with arts & culture, so having a Christian author writing speculative fiction that’s actually thoughtful and artistic is a

Every movie is a Cloverfield movie and every ad is a Tide ad. Case closed.

Apparently, if you’re into the ARG associated with the Cloverfield universe, you learn that the monster was actually laying dormant at the bottom of the ocean. The thing you see falling into the ocean at the end of Cloverfield was a satellite.

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I thought he did, between his reminiscences with Steve and the “I remember all of them” bit

“But hey, that’s what Steve’s there for—to help him get through it.”

It’s not because his boyfriend Steven Rogers is there to provide gratuitous amounts of sexual healing? Very different from how I imagined it going... :p

This is one of those times where the correct grammar sounds bad, and we should just use what everyone’s using anyway.

Wrong: “smarter than he,” while grammatically correct, is considered to be stodgy and traditional, which is why Shuri would never use it. She would either use “smarter than him” (which has been used so often as to become colloquially correct) or “smarter than he is.”