I like the Turn the Page cover if for no other reason than it rids an otherwise good tune of the terrible saxophone.
I like the Turn the Page cover if for no other reason than it rids an otherwise good tune of the terrible saxophone.
It was definitely Black Flag.
I’m not a fan of the Kravitz version of “American Woman.” It’s competent, but he doesn’t bring anything new to it at all. Totally pointless.
Yes, it is about “female journalists and developers,” but not explicitly.
Epic is asserting that Google should actively distribute Epic’s software (via Google Play) without compensation.
The Snyder’s of Hanover yellow corn chips were my go-to, but they stopped making them. Haven’t found an adequate replacement yet. Most of these brands aren’t available in North Carolina.
Yeah. A lot of other places do it that way. I’d say most in fact. Though I’m personally not a fan. Either you make a big mess pulling them off and flinging pasta sauce everywhere or you cut them off and lose a chunk of meat from each shrimp.
Easy for you to say. I’ll be pushing 50!
The asking her to fix his collars and ties part is even more bizarre. It sounds like he treated her like a personal assistant and she saw herself as more than that.
They’ve been steadily enshittifying every aspect of their business for years now.
Dave Capisano, I hardly know him...
Oh. My bad. That’s what I get for skimming I guess.
C’mon, Mary Kate... He wasn’t listed in the credits, but you still should have mentioned Dave Foley!
You can be against what Nintendo was doing while understanding the legal framework that allows them to do it.
It does. Hoover isn’t even a character. There’s only a single, off-handed mention of him.
I would say that implies even more to Larry David in Curb.
Yeah. They’re honestly not much worse than most sitcom characters.
I feel like a lot of Jerry’s love interests are pretty reasonable. But otherwise, everyone is insane.
Plus you have to judge them by the heightened reality they exist in. People like to isolate a single moment and say, “Only a psychopath would do X in real life,” but a real life person wouldn’t have suffered through the series of comic mishaps that lead up to that point because none of us live in a sitcom.
The extent to which the primary Seinfeld characters are awful has been greatly exaggerated over the years. They’re often petty and selfish, but they’re rarely malicious. And they’re frequently surrounded by people who are worse than them who initiate the various conflicts they find themselves embroiled in. Even…