This is not wholly inaccurate.
This is not wholly inaccurate.
I mean, sure, it's objectively stupid. But it can't be worse for our country than 24 hour cable news networks have been.
Surely Oprah has a channel, doesn't she?
At last, our long national nightmare is over!
This guy was easily one of my favorite characters when I was a kid. Especially after reading the "Tales from Jabba's Palace" novel, in which he's just a kind, lovable idiot obsessed with food.
Sure, that'd be great. It's more the "killing enemy soldiers who in the grand scheme of things aren't even really that bad" thing I'm wary of.
Yep. It also adds a weird wrinkle. I know a lot of people probably assume that World War I was as cut-and-dry good vs. evil as World War II was, but it's not like the German Empire was the same thing as Nazi Germany. A hero stopping the Nazis is very morally straightforward. A hero stepping in to the clusterfuck of…
I'm wondering if Steve Trevor may be fighting with the British rather than as part of an American unit? Not sure how much of that went on in World War I, but it crossed my mind.
I started to warm to the World War I setting a bit more when Chris Pine discussed it as the War to End All Wars. Framed like that, it makes sense for Diana to be involved. But the more of the battlefields and trenches they show, the more nervous I get. I really don't need Wonder Woman to become Lady Captain America.
I don't care a whit for baseball, but I'm happy that this has made so many people happy. We could use some nice things in 2016.
I first read this as "Neil DeGrasse Tyson joins Avengers" and I said to myself, "makes sense."
"Boy, I hate this pointless gridlock in Congress! I'd better vote for the outsider candidate who doesn't have connections or experience, and who vowed to not make any compromises once elected! That'll fix things."
Is Stewart's takedown "literally everything"? If not, it better at least give me "all the feels."
I hope I get a puppy!
On the one hand, I agree that the bad guys are usually a weak point in the MCU. The silver lining is that they've never made them MORE interesting than the good guy, which can certainly happen sometimes.
"People create … smaller people? … children! I lost the word there."
I feel like the parliamentary system probably makes it easier to end up with a woman executive than our presidential system, but yes, agreed. We're rather behind the curve.
Particularly if he's the world's best neurosurgeon. He can live wherever the hell he wants, because he'd be writing his own ticket - and from what I understand about the medical systems in both countries, being a doctor in the US is generally way more lucrative than in the UK.
And "Strange" is the British way of spelling "Weird."
I wonder if it's just by bias as a comics fanboy, but did anybody else hate what they did with Ultron? I mean, Spader performed it very well. I just hated the choice of making perhaps the most fearsome and terrible Avengers villain into a quippy snark-bot. He wasn't allowed to be actually menacing.