nathanfordseviltwin--disqus
NathanFordsEvilTwin
nathanfordseviltwin--disqus

I bet all the Clone Wars cartoons will be safe, it makes no sense to undo something that just finished and was widely watched. 15 year old books that actively get in the way of further development…eh.

I mean, we all figured this would be true, but knowing Chewbacca will still be alive 30 years after ROTJ is the first official confirmation of a change I believe. A pretty significant one too.

I'd rather not.

Avengers' release date was set two years before its release IIRC. Most people think that worked out okay.

So I guess this officially makes Vector Prime, and by extension the rest of the New Major Order series and it's continuations, uncanon. I'm pretty okay with this. Honestly, not that big of a loss.

I'd be more wary about what you post here, because even confirming that she has a "descent into callousness" could be considered a spoiler by some people (not me, but I've seen people get flagged for less).

Let me just say how nice it is to have the season's Daenerys plotline actually be starting with some momentum for once. Even at best, the interesting Daenerys plots only got that way halfway through the season, but here she seems all ready to start ass kicking at any moment.

Being introduced in a brothel, expositioning while a women undresses and another man half-undresses, drawing a sword, delivering more exposition, and then stabbing a dude has to be the quintessential Game of Thrones character introduction.

I know what you mean. I can barely keep attached to the canon ships without feeling paranoid that they can get brutally sunk any second (holding out hope for Tyrion/Shae is just silly by this point right? So why do I keep doing it?). Trying to hope for a non-canon ship is just insanity. For example, I don't think

I'm torn. From the ominous music that was playing, to all the pre-season interviews Maisie Williams gave, it's clear that Arya embracing her murderous side isn't going to be a good thing. BUT, it was awesome, and I loved it. I was cheering the entire time, even though I knew it was probably wrong. I think that sums up

Thanks! Have you read the All the Wrong Questions series, and would you recommend it? SoUE is one of my YA staples, but my impression of that series is that it skews a little young.

I did not see Captain America, but apparently everyone else on my facebook feed did. I also know my roommates did, from the loud, spoiler-y discussion they had in the other room. *cries self to sleep*

I haven't heard about Lemony Snicket since his first series ended, and apparently he now has like a billion children's books out? That's cool. I love that he's still working, even if all this seems a little under my age bracket.

It's dumb, but it's fun dumb. The writer (Hulke I think) is aiming for light and fluffy and knocking it out. It's a very engaging story through and through. Compare/contrast this story, which aims for light halfheartedly and it's just a slog.

Holy shit, I nearly died laughing. Stealing the sandwiches is bad enough, but then he offers it to the other officer and just…wow. His sheepish apology, that makes you realize he didn't think about what he was doing, is the perfect capstone.

It's a very early one, the first story Mel's in. You should seek it out.

Except for Fires of Vulcan, which is fantastic.

Tangent topic, since there's not much else to discuss here. Recently, I was craving a good Master story, and someone sent me The Sea Devils. What a fun runabout. Every Doctor/Master scene was golden, especially the fencing bout between them. Also, it was the first time I unreservedly loved Pertwee. I find his

Though I agree with you in spirit, mediocre is the perfect word I'd use to describe The Visitation or Mawdryn Undead.

It's actually from This Ain't Little Shop of Horrors: An XXX Parody