For the dude in the grays: Post-OT and the First Order era aren’t synonymous. We’re seeing what amounts to RotJ epilogues so far and Obi-Wan and Andor are both clearly telling part of the OT story.
For the dude in the grays: Post-OT and the First Order era aren’t synonymous. We’re seeing what amounts to RotJ epilogues so far and Obi-Wan and Andor are both clearly telling part of the OT story.
B- feels a little harsh to me. My wife and I binged this over the weekend and I’d call this a strong B/B+.
Ali Wong did great and Fina Strazza is destined for great things.
The show needs a bigger budget than it got, because the musical score (separate from the fantastic pop music) feels very generic and while the…
This looks great, but I am exhausted by the OT era, which is now at the “let’s spend time with elementary school Leia” point.
After this, I’d really like to see any other era get covered. In particular, I’d love to see the world of the First Order prior to the Force Awakens. Obviously, a lot had to happen and, outside…
Plenty of people drop $80 for pre-release packs of 80 Hearthstone decks, 5 golden decks, a few extra cards, a card back and an exclusive skin. (And given how fast skins are being given out nowadays, most players have a ton of alternate skins they’re not using.)
Based on the time of day I see those skins mostly being…
Love the show, but West Covina being in the Inland Empire is a stretch. And I’m not sure how they’re getting to the beach, but it’s apparently in the very slow lane.
That is one wild combo of ingredients.
I have a hard time picturing West Covina turning down a beautification project.
This is outrageous.
How about commemorating all of the hard working real life meth dealers, Albuquerque? How about them?
P-p-please put M-m-max on a streaming channel where we can find it easily. It’s a great ‘80s classic -- probably the first cyberpunk show -- and deserves to be m-m-more widely seen today. Today.
I’m trying to be remorseful without being ashamed of myself
Elvis was a hero to most, but he never meant shit to me.
I’m still not sure it makes up for their Napster years, but good to see the band having fun with this.
Ranch water is dead. Palomas are where it’s at. (Just replace the Topo Chico for Squirt grapefruit soda for an authentic Mexican paloma.)
Excellent piece, Claire.
Another idea for spicing up a margarita is using Ancho Reyes chili liqueur instead of an orange liqueur/agave syrup for the sweet element of your margarita. It’s more smoky than it is spicy, but it’s got a bit of a kick. (A mezcal margarita with Ancho Reyes is really smoky, though, so be…
Criticism 1: The filmmakers are pretending this is new. It isn’t.
Agree that the line under the headline is weirdly presumptuous and not backed up by data. But it’s also an opinion piece and it really doesn’t matter.
There is literally nothing in this article that backs up this point and I feel like this is 100% click bait.
My D&D campaigns — I’ve been running one for almost two decades now — actually do tackle all sorts of serious issues, like racism, religious indoctrination, familial expectations, the differences between internal and expressed identity, and all sorts of other stuff. But I would never describe that as a typical D&D…
Appendix N in the AD&D Dungeon Masters Guide lists all of those, I think, in the list of Gygax’s influences, along with Leiber and others.
The first time I read Lieber’s Fafhrd and the Grey Mouser stories, I was flabbergasted. Gygax and Arneson basically created a Fafhrd and the Grey Mouser game, with the serial numbers filed off, down to tone and feel. No other classic fantasy even comes close to contributing as much DNA as this one.