shampeon--disqus
shampeon
shampeon--disqus

They removed CVS Bangers. Fuck Soundcloud.

Look, I've got two boys. I'm going to raise them right, and I hope you do the same with your little girl.

Fuck that guy.

…and then she flipped the fuck out when the guy she was cheating with started having an affair. Shocking, I know.

Yeah, the thing about "The Queen of Versailles" is that they're sort of outsider rich people. She grew up poor and made good due to modeling. He was just a scuff-shoe salesman for timeshares and made millions. They're not Park Avenue patricians who care about parties in the Hamptons and getting their kids into

I like how everyone just stops rowing to watch a fucking white walker stare at them and raise their dead comrades to do his bidding.

"People talking about the context of an article in a comments section ruins my enjoyment of the original article. I also don't know how to just skim a comment and move on if I disagree. I will argue any and every point to the death, and am in general just a huge bummer."

Poor Mrs. Sousa.

My college girlfriend would play Dead Can Dance all the fucking time, and I hated it. For her, it was pure eroticism.

I don't think men and women are that fundamentally different. I think women's climaxes tend to be more intense, and when they're focusing on their sensations to reach orgasm, they're more inward.

Yeah, but that would pretty much contradict what the Sparrows/Faith Militant were shown doing in the show. They're fundamentalists run amok, not French revolutionaries.

Ok, but how bad would that be? The show doesn't make this clear at all. The Martells and Dorne seem only tangentially important to Westeros politics. If Dorne no longer supports the Baratheon/Lannister/Tyrell alliance, what would happen? Would they throw their support to Stannis? The Tyrells support is important

…a joke he stole from Seinfeld. And then he did another Seinfeld line later.

I just want to know what the fucking stakes are in Dorne. Like, what was the fallout going to be if Jaime and Bronn succeeded in abducting Myrcella? How about the Sand Snakes succeeding? Specifically, how does this any of this affect the politics of Westeros and/or the coming winter's zombie/dragon apocalypse—the two

They were armed. Given the logic of this show, though, I don't know that just giving a bunch of randos some swords and maces makes them a formidable army. Stannis's troops mowing through the Wildlings comes to mind, and the Wildlings were much more battle hardened than a bunch of peasants and minor noblemen.

I don't see how them shutting the beerhalls and brothels would win even a discontented populace over.

I think the point about Chigur was that he *thought* he was a force of nature, like fate or blind justice, but he was just a violent man who can get hit by a motherfucking car coming out of nowhere like everyone else.

I don't believe the show is intentionally making a statement about the relative merits of any political theory, but taking feudalism as a given in that society, which is closely modeled on medieval Europe.

If the High Sparrow represents some idealized religious, political, and I guess economic theory, the Faith Militant are more like the Khmer Rouge.

Shit, really? Well, good thing the family "dealt with it." I'm sure everything is solved, then.