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Sarah.
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The neutral pocket dimension beneath a shapeless time void just happened to be unguarded? Michael can blame it on good being stupid all he wants, but my theory is The Good Place knows exactly what Michael is up to and is letting him do it to see if he can become a better not person.

I think it’s supposed to be a reflection of the mixed messages we receive about people acting crazy, especially women.

Hoo-boy, and Rebecca isn’t even in the car with Josh right now to gaslight him.

That’s basically what Paula said at the end. If she hasn’t spoken up in eleven years they’ve got some serious communication issues to address. Which once again crushs poor Tim.

I think that’s exactly it. Like I tell my kids after I accidentally swear in front of them, the words themselves are less an issue than how they’re used. It would be needlessly aggressive if the characters were all swearing as a means of macho posturing. To convey joy and excitement seems like a fine application to me.

I was surprised by how many Star Trek fans took umbrage at the f-bombs. It may be because I personally enjoy swearing so much in real life, but I was thoroughly delighted with the scene. It was a fine example of the spirit of enthusiastic scientific discovery people seem to feel the series is lacking.

Will Ferrell has made more great comedies (and it’s hard to imagine that balance shifting), but has never made a “serious” movie nearly as good as Sandler’s three best.

I enjoyed season one. Don’t believe the critics when they say it wasn’t good.

On the contrary, the events of the prologue set everything in motion — the war, Burnham’s guilt, the other characters’ mistrust of her, Lorca’s interest in recruiting her. And two of Burnham’s Shenzhou crewmates, Saru and Kayla Detmer, are with her on Discovery.

Even better, Burnham reciting Alice is a deep Trek continuity nod. The fact that Amanda was fond of Lewis Carroll and read the Alice books to her offspring was established in The Animated Series: “Once Upon a Planet” by Len Janson & Chuck Menville, when Kirk expressed surprise that Spock was familiar with the

I would also like to stand up for the “third party analysis” being poorly described in this article. I just read the book in question, Is the Cat in the Hat Racist? by Phil Nel, for a graduate class and its discussion is far more nuanced than it is being represented in this article. Nel acknowledges Seuss’ anti-racist

Please read the actual letter, Alien Jesus. She actually made a pretty good argument, since her school is a wealthy, predominantly white school, so has far less need for free books than other schools across that state or across the country.

Or you could read the librarian’s actual response suggesting that donating books to a library in an already wealthy, predominately white neighborhood is dumb, giving suggestions as to better places to choose, but nah the White House’s narrative makes for better clickbait, good job AV Club!

You may think that’s Jake Gyllenhaal making another worryingly hard swing in weight for a prestige role, but that’s actually just Tatiana Maslany playing both characters. Easy mistake to make.

A funny thing I didn’t have a chance to include in the piece: The crowd actually chanted “thank you” to the assembled media after Violent J gave them a shout out from the podium. I’m guessing that did not happen at MOAR.

This is America, making shitty rap without interference from the government should be one of our founding principles.

Now, what needs to happen is a juggalo needs to find the missing evidence that would bring the Russia investigation to a massive conclusion of impeachments and arrests.

Then, Mueller could go up to Shaggy J and be all like “We cool, ninja.”

I think I found a new calling, writing Juggalo fan fic.

Personal hatred of Juggalos is fine, oppression by the government is never OK, ESPECIALLY if is a group people hate.