That's my reading too. A lot of the late Gen Xers and early Gen Yers will have kids in the 7-9 age bracket now. That makes me feel all old......kids today and their lack of standing in bookstore lines at 10:00p.m. for a midnight release.
That's my reading too. A lot of the late Gen Xers and early Gen Yers will have kids in the 7-9 age bracket now. That makes me feel all old......kids today and their lack of standing in bookstore lines at 10:00p.m. for a midnight release.
Dean Thomas, or someone close to him, just so his dad's story could be worked in (too me it was one of the most heartbreaking and I understand the necessity of including Neville's parents' story more but would love for it to be discussed if this was done. Same if it was set during the Maurauder era.
I grew up in the country too but never associated it with my fear of zombies. I am still terrified of what I feel is an inevitable zombie apocalypse though. For me, it is the strain of surviving in such a bleak situation where it seems the only chance at a non-eaten alive death is to take your own life but you are…
I had the same reaction. There seems little reason to use the Titantic specifically (and if one must do so then the obvious angle is mummies). This uses a real-life event, and it doesn't have the refuge in audacity that some other things could go far. Not only are you talking about actual people we know the names of…
There was one show, Amish in the City, done with actual young adults on the "Running Around" phase, I believe they were all 18-20. It was done well enough (except for the inevitable makeovers) and showed some decent amount of incite (one guy felt he came close to drowning and verbalized his fears on what it would mean…
I am curious as to how they can be punished for rape even if acquitted. I know in some cases they have been acquitted of the rape or there was not enough evidence and they were punished in other ways (for sodomy in cases were alleged oral or anal occurred, or for adultery if they were married, or for sex if…
And to clarify, I was responding specifically to the notion that posting a picture and referencing a muffintop or being fat can be in and of itself motivational, especially when the person in question is so far from the norm in terms of near-adherence to a beauty ideal.
I'm not saying it should be bigger or that it should be anything, just that I find it off-putting that she called it a muffintop instead of just posting the picture. The size/weight is irrelevant.
But in that same sentiment, what about young women larger than her (the majority) who see someone so much smaller than them showing a muffintop? Wouldn't it have been enough to post an unedited picture of herself without the caption and leave it at that?
Seriously. I think the people questioning her comment really need to read this. HRC doesn't think this is what stay-at-home mothers do, but she knew that it was what people asking her questions like this wanted to believe stay-at-home mother's did. She was essentially mocking the superficial image that critics wanted…
I think the biggest point is that this was started in response to a quote about HRC defending her choice not to be a traditional stay-at-home mother. That's the reason this was ever started, the entire reason. You can't pretend to divorce gender politics from the bake-off. This isn't some random bake-off but one…
And what about the non-assholes who have the same characteristics in appearance as this person? When you snark on some aspect of his appearance, you snark on the aspect of that appearance regardless of who it is associated with. If this guy had been considered overweight,would it be okay to make fun of him for that…
Some Islamic art doesn't depict people. Some Islamic art doesn't depict people. Some Islamic art doesn't depict people. Islamic art spans centuries and continents and it is not a monolith, nor is the ruling on how or if to depict people. Some Islamic art even depicts the Prophet.
Wow, so the invention of time travel enables Jack the Ripper?
Guinan at 1:56 is simply indescribable. I want to sing the praises of that scene but the words escape me. A success indeed, a success indeed. Also, Riker moving in and blocking the Klingon is hilarious. At the Star Trek:TNG panel at DragonCon, Dorn actually commented on how Riker was only interested in Troi when Worf…
I kinda understand this, however the alternative was watching one spouse push another off a roof, not to mention the whole notion of heroic sacrifice via possible suicide which seems to happen quite often in Doctor Who. If you aren't comfortable with kids watching this, then why the other instances of heroic…
I might have been practically rolling around on the floor crying and pulling at my hair when:
I know, I could watch that over and over, I think it was a brilliant addition, and I also like the drop down, pop up, drop down, pop up, look at Buffy, drop down sequence too. Soooo, basically I like the entire scene.
I also intend to loose about 150lbs and have thought about what I will do about the skin. I have looked into the non-surgical options but I don't know if those will be drastic enough or permanent enough to be the most realistic and cost-effective. From the descriptions, some of them seem to only be temporary lifts.
I disliked the movie because of the whole "white guy goes to India and finds himself" trope. However, the show eventually grew on me because I felt like they were focusing more on the other castmembers as time went on.