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That's one of my favorites. The orange-flavored Kit-Kats are also great.

Well I know if I put on too much eyeshadow, I always get the urge to murder comely, virginal princesses.

Count your blessings. Tamsin Merchant shot an episode as Daenerys and was replaced by Emilia Clarke. I've only seen her work on The Tudors, but I really cannot imagine her bringing the same badass swagger to the role that Clarke does.

A papaya enzyme facial followed by a deep cleansing seaweed mud wrap. Death to clogged pores!

Did someone say 'dragon wieners'?

I really thought that link was going to lead to the Northern Exposure page.

"Coming up next: Timothy Olyphant in…'The Mountie'."

It's funny you brought up the BBC miniseries. I watched it right after I watched the 2011 movie. I was originally going to mention it as a huge disappointment for me, but didn't because it would've been off-topic and made my comment too long. So here are my thoughts;

Literary adaptations of classic books usually disappoint me, but the 2011 movie version of Jane Eyre was surprisingly good. I thought Fassbender was too handsome to be a credible Rochester, but he brought an unhinged anger and desperation to the role that is missing in so many other performances. It also looks

There's also this, from a 2007 interview with Gaiman: "We need someone who has the same obsession with the source material as Peter Jackson had with Lord Of The Rings or Sam Raimi had with Spider-Man"

Guillermo Del Toro is another possibility. He already works in Gaiman's vocabulary.

And they were right.

I always thought Welcome to Night Vale would make an excellent comic book series. I think the medium would suit the rhythms of the show better than a straightforward novel.

It's unlikely for the victim of a murder or terminal illness to be in the room while you're telling your hilarious murder/terminal illness jokes. It is very likely for the victim of a rape to be listening to your amazing rape jokes.

I remember that ambivalence too, but then I heard they were engaged so I figured he was leaning more toward the idea than against it. Why get engaged to a woman who clearly wanted to have kids in a few years if you're dead-set against the idea? (Though this is Mr. Self Sabotage we're talking about here, so my question

I haven't listened to WTF in a while and this news surprises me. It seemed like he was really settled and happy and secure.

Ron was in Gryffindor.

Also Jane's father and all those people who died in that plane crash. And Lydia's baby daughter. Not to mention Skyler, Marie, and Junior.

Gretchen and Elliot still sort of won in the end. Junior will spend the rest of his life thinking he's been helped by them because they're just that generous and kind. Scaring them was probably satisfying to Walt, but again, it was just a hollow symbolic victory.

Yes, the scene reminded you that Jesse is an artist at heart. Remember the comics he used to draw?