notteddanson--disqus
not ted danson
notteddanson--disqus

I just watched it this morning (having somehow missed it in all my years as an huge Pee Wee fan) and found it odd that the Del Rubio Triplets, whom i had never heard of, wore short-skirted Santa outfits showcasing their legs while obviously being in their sixties. The Special was brilliant though, and was the perfect

I just watched it this morning (having somehow missed it in all my years as an huge Pee Wee fan) and found it odd that the Del Rubio Triplets, whom i had never heard of, wore short-skirted Santa outfits showcasing their legs while obviously being in their sixties. The Special was brilliant though, and was the perfect

War on Christmas something or other…

War on Christmas something or other…

I wanted those colorforms sooo bad— and i was in high school!

I wanted those colorforms sooo bad— and i was in high school!

Renting VCRs— how 80s. I rented mine from Mr. Video on my way home after classes in high school. That is until my mom got me my first VCR— a Broksonic!

Renting VCRs— how 80s. I rented mine from Mr. Video on my way home after classes in high school. That is until my mom got me my first VCR— a Broksonic!

I thought the trailer was pretty gross.

The only time people say they want to have this conversation, is when something they don't want brought up gets brought up.

I want to sit on my couch comfortably, by myself, controller in hand, and completely enter into another world for a few hours (occasionally days) without interruption. That's it.

Sean of the Dead is a work of pure brilliance. The World's End was a funny and charming romp. Hot Fuzz is clever, but lacking emotion and character.

Because he was open to it. If you pay attention to your environment, you can find out all sorts of stuff. Just like he could track, and others couldn't. The information was there, he was just more open to it. Besides, he had trained to survive in the wilderness.

Nothing beats the Obama Chia Pet, though.

I think the A.V.Club's musical taste is too low.

Not a war, just a comment. I realize that the use of "begs the question" has changed from its etymological origin— i've heard it used "incorrectly" repeatedly on NPR. I just think it sounds dumb.

Questions are raised, not begged.

Locke didn't control the rain. He could just tell when it was going to rain. He was in touch with the Island. I never, not once, ever thought that they were implying that he controlled the weather.

He seemed like an alright guy, and the videos he did were pretty entertaining, but his writing was beyond annoying. He always gave terrible, terrible nick-names to everything. At the time, i soaked up everything i could find concerning Lost— books, podcasts, web sites, magazines. But i quickly bailed on Doc

Well, they *were* terribly introcuced, written, and acted characters. But then Exposé aired, and it was all worth it. The only way i can tolerate those characters now is knowing how they meet their end.