Might have "fallen for it" if he hadn't bumped into the picture.
Might have "fallen for it" if he hadn't bumped into the picture.
I would say "partially, but the owner has more influence".
Well, I'll throw in my anecdote here. I've known several people who have owned several pit bulls, and without exception, the ones who treat them like they expect them to be mean dogs end up with mean dogs, and the good owners have some of the nicest dogs I've known.
That looks exhausting.
shit imagine trying to slow this fucking thing down, what are you going to do, turn it around and let the star you are traveling to try and slow you?
I want to be in lesbian with Tatiana so much.
Also that 90% of the suggestions don't qualify as MacGuffins
I hope the person who recorded this kept the video of all of the failed attempts before this one, and someday is fed up with beeb enough to release them.
The only way something with a "huge gravitational pull" would cause that is if it yanked earth into a new orbit. That kind of event would leave the earth in a highly eliptical orbit, yet we're in a nearly circular orbit, so we know that hasn't happened.
No offense, but you have clearly heard just enough about these concepts to have a lot of misconceptions, but not enough to know what you're talking about.
If mass extinction happened every 15000 years, we wouldn't be here (our species 15 times older than that). You may be thinking of the roughly 62 million year extinction "cycle", but that isn't really a cycle, just an average. Also, mass extinctions have other sources besides asteroid/comet impacts. Supervolcanos…
No, when I say the odds of passing the same rogue twice are low, I don't mean we might just barely miss it, I mean the odds of it even being within a thousand of light years of us ever again are miniscule. For example, let's say the sun and the rogue planet are in perfectly circular orbits and the difference in their…
The planet would not just be sitting there while we orbited around, waiting for us to pass that spot again, it would also be orbiting the galaxy. Galactic orbits are no where near perfect circles or elipses, the mass distribution of the galaxy is not uniform, and is constantly changing. The odds against two objects…
Rogue planets, by definition, do not orbit the sun.
And even though Illaria supposedly has an army on the way, they send one guy
You lost me at "I don't recall Indiana Jones IV being so damn terrible"
I suspect it's out of focus because they couldn't get both the bat and the man in focus while trying to force the perspective, so they focused on a point between them, so they were equally out of focus.
I think we need more lessons on perspective in elementary school.
That's because they're actors.
Going to call bullshit on most of the description of this. It has no propulsion system, it did not follow anyone. Most of the shots were only a second or two of it drifting.The whole elevator scene clearly involved multiple takes. For example, there was no cameraman in the elevator when she's shown entering and…