I do not know, but I want it to happen to my hair. And look good around my face. Alas, I fear this will never happy.
I do not know, but I want it to happen to my hair. And look good around my face. Alas, I fear this will never happy.
I assume all things are about GoT unless presented with contrary evidence.
Some of us have extremely vivid dreams and need to recount them in order to convince ourselves that they were merely dreams. I'm still not convinced that there aren't guinea pigs and snakes hiding in my house and that my pianist hasn't quit because of it.
It's definitely not a Nashville party.
Eyes not quite crazy enough. But there's still time.
Switch Gendry and Hodor. I think Hodor has depths of hidden savant talent. And drummers are sexy.
No, Jenny Johnson. Sesame Street is genuinely informative and educational. It advocates for tolerance and love and understanding and equality. Fox News, not so much.
I love that movie. But for some reason no one wants to watch it with me or my father who both know that the funniest parts of the whole movie, and which produce howls of laughter from both of us every time are all the shots of the orchestra conductor conducting. Nobody else ever gets why they're so damn funny. …
Hm. I wasn't even allowed in the yearbook. No senior photos for the Robot!
He has practiced that face a LOT.
Ummmm....... Yes? It happens all the time. Sometimes, depending on the size of the school/ the way the classes are designed/ the subject being taught there's no other option. Teachers have numerous ways to make sure that they keep their grading as objective and anonymous as possible.
As I see it, here's why this particular advert (just the print one; I can't watch the tv spot right now so I can't comment on it) is not exploitative in the same way that so many ads with scantily clad women are: I don't object to simply having the female body in advertising. The human body is a wonderful thing. …
No, Pee-Wee, those boxes are not ambivalent. They are plotting something.
It's a good analysis, but I've never read a version of the actual fairy (that wasn't a novelization) tale that included the talking domestic items (all the versions I've seen have invisible, silent servants) or the library. I think those were items invented by Disney (or stolen from contemporary authors retelling the…
This kind of question is why I love novelizations of fairy tales. Less call to mass market, and the author can truly tell a new story. In Robin McKinley's "Beauty," Beauty rejects the Beast momentarily after he becomes handsome because she doesn't recognize him. She gets over that pretty quickly. However, when…