nathanfordseviltwin--disqus
NathanFordsEvilTwin
nathanfordseviltwin--disqus

I have Hannibal, Orphan Black, Veep, The Americans, and the remainders of Justified, Homeland, Archer, and Walking Dead's seasons for the summer. So I'm pretty set haha.

Arrow still kind of works as a breather, since the themes are a lot less heavy, and the characters much more likable. But yeah, no one can match that show in terms of sheer action and blistering pace.

For me, every joke in the ads just seemed really stale and bland. Okay, there was one exception, the scene where the woman was rescued by the fireman.

I just saw the Parks and Recreation season finale. AAHHHHHHHHHHH! So perfect! Parks and Rec is the hangoutiest hangout show that ever existed by this point, damn did that episode know it. The next season could just be a series of disconnected shots where Leslie alternates between being flustered and hyper-competent,

Good call, Masters of Sex really deserves to be here. That's a great pick, and so is Fallout.

I second Independent Movie!

Normally I'd nominate a Justified episode, but man was this season just so underwhelming.

I counter-nominate "App Development and Condiments"

With that restriction, I nominate Day of the Doctor, the 50th Anniversary special.

I guess this means Whedon is cribbing from Ultimates for plotlines.

Aaron Taylor-Johnson isn't bland though, I've seen him act well. The writing and direction have to be a factor as well.

Everything? *starts writing We Need 2 Talk About Kevin spec script*

Starring Eddie Murphy?

2God 2Zilla (Okay, that's taken)

I'd say Nintendo is different enough from PS/Xbox because they don't get some of the bigger ports, and the gimmicks mean more games are exclusive. There's a disconnect there.

Some people are so inconsiderate.

"Well he's on everyone else's phones, why wouldn't he be on mine?"

Honestly, it's only in the short first chapter and more of a segue to talking about arcades as a whole. The book really picks up with SpaceWar and the other MIT pre-Pong games in the second chapter, where it finds its first "protagonist" in Nolan Bushnell.

I'll check it out, thanks. I've noticed a lot of similar works lose interest around that generation, it's pretty consistent. The book I mentioned manages to stick around a little longer, but mostly to talk about the big deal in parental outrage that happened at the time around things like Doom and Mortal Kombat, and

"Let us out! Let us out!"