mustafaaansare
Mustafaa Ansare
mustafaaansare

Well, your conversation has convinced me that the answer to the original question is, “If you mean the show itself, a truncated single season of television on its own merits? Not particularly, BUT the process of that cancellation, and what its mythologizing has come to symbolize, bear relevance, still, on the

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so ILL!

I'm going to assume you've seen Stand Alone Complex in its entirety... Psychopass? Its appears I'm the only one that really enjoyed Flowers of Evil... um *scratches beard*

hehe, in fact, I'd be mortified and interested (but more interested) if Ubisoft collected THAT data and had any way of analyzing or at least visualizing it. A psychological profile of gamers globally.

Apologies in advance, because I simply don't have the energy at the moment to devote to an adequately articulate and complete response to this. But in tired truncation: not the particular actions of that/those individuals, BUT the collective social phenomenon of decisions made based on that information really does

Yeah, I've seen "Artist. Sleeps in car." Before and had the same reaction. *puts away phone in guilt. Walks to coffee shop to play chess*

I actually used my name. And likeness. I can't be the ONLY Mustafaa Shepherd in the WORLD, can I?

you know the second season started last week, right? Its dope so far...

I really really, REALLY do want it to succeed, for that very reason! So many elements borrowed from other stuff that I like (watching the pilot, I was like, hey Deus Ex...) and I was hoping that it would contribute to that pool of pop-cultural awesome itself. There's still time...

Some of my friends have similar reactions. One actually said she could only hear noise! As a thirty year old that still seeks out new sensory and media experience, I find it distressing when I encounter others my age that have already succumbed to the inarticulate and needlessly stubborn danger of Squareness,

        Sawyer, from Lost, sprang immediately to mind, a scoundrel crowd favorite who shares character geneology with Jane of Firefly (compare fan sentiment for him to that for Mal or Simon), Wolverine of the X-Men (everyone hates Cyclops for some reason), and of course Han Solo. The main protagonist in Lost is

I love the sentiment you express here much more than I liked the finale, and my disdain for the last ep covers more ground than the finale scene. The final scene, specifically, though, felt totally abrupt and ambiguous to me, and not in a thought-provokingly-mysterious way. I'm all on board for the notion of a

Sooooo amazing! Since the first season ended, I can't help but hear Mr. Rabbit's voice in my head whenever I read a news story about over population, or food riots, or... pretty much every problem we face on the planet today. Like Wilson-Wilson, I wonder if maybe... that's not...such a bad idea?

Or how about Maddie Ferguson's untimely demise? That scene STILL gives my contemporarily-jaded, American-Horror-Story-exposed spine tingles.

Beat me to it! "Daaaaaaay, a brighter daaaaaaaay, when all the shadoooooows will gooooo awaaaaaaay"

That's totally reasonable. In fact, your explanation is concise and sensible, which makes it very different from what I hear from friends, re:'whiny' characters or otherwise.

Okay, I've been trying to understand the Connor-Hate for yeeeeeeears now. Not because I'm particularly fond of the character (I do like Connor. He's not my fav, but I dig it), but because the vagueness thats usually employed to explain or justify it baffles me. What does it really mean when people accuse a character

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What about the context-reflexive soap opera favorite of the denizens of Twin Peaks, Invitation to Love?