rbatty024--disqus
RBatty024
rbatty024--disqus

He's only going through the physical albums he owns. This doesn't mean he doesn't have digital versions of those musicians and genres.

Repeater is the album that hooked me. I think it has some of their catchier material, but, yeah, everything they've done is superb. They're one of a handful of bands where you could conceivably argue that their final album is actually their best.

I took it as just one of those friendship dynamics where one guy is always on the outs, like Donny in The Big Lebowski. I also thought it was fucking funny.

"Well, the scare economy tanked, so what the hell else are we going to do?"

Even if it's not quite a masterpiece, Heaven's Gate is still a really great movie and deserves attention from any cinephile. The roller skating scene is an absolute joy.

I'm calling it now. The new character befriends Flash and the gang and helps them fight the season's big bad. But by the end of the season it turns out that he was in fact the big bad all along!

The characters in the new movie are going to hit a wall, and then they'll use a sledgehammer to break through. Duh!

A music video tie in to a summer blockbuster? The 90s really are back.

Batman's rogues gallery is so deep that even though they've been used before, we really haven't gotten a proper version of Two Face, The Riddler, and Scarecrow.

Whenever I sneak a peak at what someone's looking at on their cell phone, I'd say that ninety percent of the time they're looking at memes and pictures from social media. This is hardly a scientific survey or anything, but I doubt people are sitting there reading War and Peace on their cell phone.

I mostly just use the library, but when I do want to actually buy a book, I make sure to go to an independent bookseller. It's the least I can do, and the ones in my area seem like they're doing fine. If Barnes and Noble goes under, then I don't think it would be much of a loss to the book reading culture

I remember when the Kindle came out and all of a sudden just about everyone on the subway had one. They forgot them the minute they could look at cat pictures on their phone. Fucking East Coast trend hoppers, man.

Downvoted.

Remember when Barnes and Noble were the evil corporation taking sales away from independent booksellers? Somehow they have now become the underdogs.

I have to disagree. I live in Boston and the persecution complex is insufferable. I was talking to some dude when I was buying a bed once, and I mentioned Cleveland's championship drought, and he totally tried to one up me with that Red Sox crap. It's like, dude, you had one team that sucked for a long time. But

I casually pay attention to sports, and since I'm originally from Cleveland, I still root for my Cleveland teams. (There's no fucking way I'm rooting for Boston teams). I usually go out to the bar to catch a few Browns games each year. It's a nice way to connect to people who you don't really know and create a sense

I was really hoping for one of those stories about how fame corrupts. After the famed landing all the accolades go to Sully's head, and all of a sudden he's forgetting his friends and family. Towards the end of the second act, Sully gets out of his bed, leaving behind two beautiful women who wanted a night with the

There are plenty of stories of studio execs wanting to take a film that's set in the past and set it in the present day because they think a contemporary setting will appeal to audiences. In fact, this almost happened to The Rocketeer when it was going through development.

Alexander Skarsgard, you are no Johnny Weismuller.

Obviously this all comes down to taste, but I thought that John Carter was a really good old-school pulp adventure. I'd say the same thing about Sky Captain and The Rocketeer. The Lone Ranger also had some great moments, although it was a little bizarre for general audiences (which is actually one of the reasons why I