“A few years ago.”
“A few years ago.”
I don’t understand logic like this. The TV show happened. People aren’t going to forget it. If you want to remake your own thing fine, but don’ position it as erasing the timeline. Who cares?
I mean I’m cancelling my account after each season. So, like 18 bucks a year over 7 is 126. What I’d dish out for the full series collection so I’m good with that.
Like not even close to being true. They’ve endorsed women who support Bernie.
The affront that adult coloring books mean to society is staggering. I’m glad this thread educated me. Back to my morally and artistically superior video game.
That’s what my cat does. Just chills and roams around the car and will sometimes find funny sleeping positions but doesn’t get in the way. UNLESS you’re in hour 12 of a 14 hour car ride after already putting in 20 driving hours that week. Then she gets a little upset at you.
Agreed. The real kicker in this story is that the EFM and the state knew and did nothing. The local officials had no authority in this case.
Just to note: the important thing here is that the email was sent to the state-appointed Emergency Financial Manager. Flint city officials, including the Mayor, had no executive or legislative authority at the time. It was all being run through the EFM, who was not elected, hired, or approved by anyone in the City of…
Yup! This.
I can’t recommend Pandemic and Forbidden Desert enough. Great, fun, aggravating, exhilarating games. From the same designer both cooperative games and challenging for all levels of skill and age. I love’em to death.
I can’t recommend Pandemic and Forbidden Desert enough. Great, fun, aggravating, exhilarating games. From the same…
I don’t deny that it resonates but at this point it is becoming trope for superhero TV/film. There are other themes superheroes media can focus besides harping on the same one. Or if you going to harp on it be a bit more creative with your approach.
Eh. I'm underwhelmed it's the exact same fight SHIELD/almost all superhero TV/fill has had since the X-Men. I think it's time they argue about something else.
I’ve rewatched it a couple time, and while it has a 90’s vibe, and some of that pre-Golden Era varnish it holds up pretty well. The good episodes are still REALLY good (Who Monitors the Birds?) and the end is still heartbreaking. Really sad this got canned.
And, more importantly, McDonald’s knew they were serving coffee hotter than what was recommend as they had been warned about it multiple times. That’s where most of the fines came from was the judge slapping McDonald’s hard because they had ignored repeated warnings to lower their coffee temperature.
I thought the same thing. People remember Jon showing up as a fully formed comedy god. But he wasn't fully polished his first time out, and I think Trevor is farther along. Of course, we can always cite the now tired story of Conan's first few years, and he's considered a comedy genius now.
I checked for Inglourious Basterds.
I'm surprised with Selma, but I can see the argument for leaving Django off. What I want to see is the list of movies that were right on the cusp.
To be fair, Scott isn't around anymore, and he wrote the original view. But from another viewpoint—lists like these are supposed to allow you to go back and challenge your original assumptions of films. You realize what has influenced people, and are caught up less in the moment of the film's marketing, what else it…
Nah. Makes to much sense.
YouGov's exit poll is an internet panel of people who have voted. Their methodology is unorthodox, and their Senate and Gov polls have been the outliers this cycle in the US. I wouldn't put much in them as an exit poll. I imagine No pulls it off, but YouGov isn't a great barometer.