scotticusawsm
Scotticus
scotticusawsm

Martin Short recently went through a divorce, so it's possible that money is part of it. He does have a full time gig as the animated Cat in the Hat and as schill for Lays potato chips (at least here in Canada) though.

"Aww, I'm gonna miss my little baby Bobby."

I found it weird that they ignored or retconned those aspects, yet they had the joke of Flanders being able to get insurance for the kids knowing that gambling isn't a sin, which if I'm not mistaken is a callback to when they lost their house to a hurricane in season 8.

I can't help watching Family Guy out of a morbid curiosity. I feel like they've just completely banked on having a lowest common denominator audience and write with that in mind. Sadly though, I'm sure it gets better ratings than Bob's Burgers and Brooklyn Nine Nine.

It is exactly as uncomfortable and terrible as you imagine it to be.

It's so unconvincing to see Lynn Crawford and Michael Smith try to be intimidating.

A trip to any store with an automotive section would give you all the fuel stabilizers and fuel treatments you'd ever need. It takes a few ounces to keep the fuel in my motorcycle's tank usable when I store it for the winter.

I always loved how Flashback's animations added to the feeling of your character being a regular guy who was way out of his element. No matter how you perfectly timed your jump was, it never looked quite like he'd make it.

Correct, and the argument being presented is that with proper counsel, the trial would have had a different outcome. Essentially they'll present the court with what they feel is compelling evidence that Gutierrez had not informed her client of options during the trial that would be in his best interest to plead his

Ineffective assistance of counsel doesn't require "proof of innocence" so much as it requires evidence of counsel proving incompetent or misleading their client. There's a number of legal experts who agree that many of Gutierrez's decisions during the trial did not serve the best interests of her client and that is

I actually didn't mind Buried. For a film that is entirely Ryan Reynolds trapped in a box, it's actually really suspenseful. If you're claustrophobic, it makes for a great horror film.

I got the same impression of Ayla possibly just being timid and hard to create an interesting story for. Normally I wouldn't be too surprised if a certain bias was to blame, but I've never found Gordon Ramsay's shows to be characteristic of that. In fact, one of the few things I appreciate about Hell's Kitchen is that

Elite, snobbish frat boy starfuckers? They think we're the cool kids!

Such as the southern portions of America which have a history of being "formerly Mexico".

For what it's worth, We Hunted the Mammoth is about mocking these idiots, but yeah, you'll read some things you wish didn't exist.

I think that more speaks to the fact that many women are far more polite when dealing with creeps than they realistically could be.

"Abuse similar to slavery" which he felt was wrong, but not in the sense of sex slavery, which he believes women should naturally be subjected to.

I'd say that if it happens once, then maybe you picked someone on a particularly bad day. If it's happening frequently, then you probably have the wrong perception of what "trying not to be creepy" entails.

Colin Farrell? Perry Farrell? Pharell Williams? Which is it!?

I watched Ghostbusters for the first time very recently and as an adult, Venkman comes off as incredibly creepy. I can imagine that, as a kid you wouldn't really notice it, but I find it weird how much people seem to gloss over it when they talk about it nowadays.