sgjorge
Stefano Gonçalves Jorge
sgjorge

But of course Star Trek...

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As a pediatrician who has given out thousands of vaccines, and with that experience decided to fully vaccinate my own children as recommended by the American Academy of Pediatrics and ACIP (or, you know, science), I must say that I love Penn and Teller:

I just can't make sense of the time-travel mechanics the show proposed. It seems that what they're saying is that if you time travel and create any sort of paradox, the universe you're from cannibalizes itself, messily, but the new timeline you've jumped into is fine (and which will have a future different from the

I'm so tired of the "humans use 10% of their brain capacity" nonsense. It wasn't accurate in Limitless and it isn't accurate in this. Come up with some other pseudoscientific reason someone has superpowers.

Not to open a whole can of worms again, but the J.J. Abrams Trek films definitely seem to belong on this list.

I require this awesome window reading seat NOW.

And Monty Python and the Holy Grail.

...I need this comic.

Marvel Swimsuit issues weren't all bad.......

1984 Love Story

I think this is appropriate.

This is pretty much impossible to do without it being totally not safe for work but, Cronenberg pretty much got all this covered years ago.

It's a very similar dynamic to Common Law actually, especially the later episodes where they get a bit more comfortable with each other. I'd say the dynamic between Ealy and Urban in Almost Human is always at least as good as Common Law, with occasions of brilliance that best even the high points of Common Law.

So this, with the Python treatment?

Hmm. Intriguing.