moxbuncher
MoxBuncher
moxbuncher

I can imagine this being some sappy drama romance film starring Rachel McAdams and that Ensel Inglesnort where a young man meets a bright, independent, feisty lesbian who teaches him the real meaning of feminism love before he flunks out of school and loses a job at his father’s law office. I can see the trailer now...

Cheap because you obviously bought the big bag o’ red delicious apples that always end up tasting mealy instead of hand selecting galas with a few pink ladies thrown in for special snacks and ugh god don’t even get me started on those nasty-ass navel oranges girl you never heard of clementines?

“Spirituality” has made some of the most monumentously selfish people evangelically selfish. Selfishness as a religious experience. I’m all for self care and self love and no one loves a good boundry like I do. But if the road to your own bliss bisects the highway to Assholeville drive right by me

wow. The only label he needs is sexy.

Let's just, like, any time someone wants to interview Caitlyn, they just go to the Wachowski sisters instead? Can we do that? For a better tomorrow?

Seriously though, how DO they always find anything remotely anti-Putin THAT quickly? I am beginning to think the rumours about government-paid pro-Putin trolls are totally true and there is a whole office building full of them just googling and commenting about Ou Glorious Leader Who Kills Bears with His Bare Hands

What’s REALLY amazing is that—judging by the press coverage, at least—Margaret Atwood seems to be putting out a comic that has no art in it. Or at least that the impression that I get, given that not a single story I’ve read about this thing sees fit to mention the artist.

I’m sorta with you, though for (maybe) different reasons. Surfacing had practically no plot, and it touched me so deeply it felt like a religious experience. Life Before Man had the same qualities and it bored me so hard it actually made me kind of angry. Oryx and Crake was interesting, sure, but not enough to make me

Totally agree. To clarify my comment, I meant that the graphic novel world could use more female protagonists written by authors who write women well. I would have loved to have seen how she would have done that.

If you mean every line is a gift that you should let wrap you in a warm embrace of brilliance THEN SURE ITS HEAVY HANDED.

Yes to Margaret Atwood! Yes to graphic novels! Yes to staying in more!

Is there a German word to describe that feeling when you are simultaneously delighted by something and also want to burn out your eyeballs with acid?