skipskatt
Skipskatte
skipskatt

That's just weird. The one thing a deep dish pizza shouldn't be is dry. There's the grease from the cheese and toppings, plus the sauce on top.
The other thing is that deep dish REALLY needs to be made to order. You can't have one sitting out under heat lamps and expect it to be any good. That's why, wherever you go,

My nephew and dad go absolutely nuts for Skyline Chili. Personally, I can take it or leave it. It's really just spaghetti with more meat and less tomato in the "sauce".

That's certainly true. I eat deep dish twice a year; when my sister visits and when my parents visit.

I wouldn't say that, though we can occasionally get a bug up our collective asses when New Yorkers start with their "NY is the best at everything, always," nonsense. Though we figure that feeling superior is the only way a New Yorker can justify living in a 2,000/mo shoebox with four other people where they have to

Pequod's is really good, but I wouldn't classify it as "Chicago Deep Dish". It's really its own thing, with the fluffier crust that cuts WAY back on the whole "wall of cheese and meat" you get with "regular" deep dish.

Exactly. The whole "wall of cheese" thing is a little much.

You can do a veggie Deep Dish and it can turn out pretty damned good. My sister's vegetarian and when she comes into town she likes Giordano's with garlic, green peppers, onions, mushrooms, and spinach.

Well, one, you need toppings. A plain Chicago Deep Dish is just an impenetrable wall of cheese (unless you go to Pequod's, but that's not REALLY Chicago Deep Dish. Damn good, though, much fluffier crust taking up a lot more real-estate). With nothing to break it up, it gets really, really dense. The "classic" toppings

I didn't think so. I came to the show with no knowledge at all (I honestly thought the show was going to leave it an open question whether the mutant powers were a delusion, and I had NO idea it was connected to the Marvel Universe). With the knowledge he had, it made sense to connect the dots in the way he did.

This show has somehow maintained that four second, floor sliding out from under you, "Tyler Durden" moment for four full episodes now.

When I was a kid I used to tie myself up in logic-knots trying to figure out the "exact opposite" of various superheroes.

And on the flip-side, Matthew Broderick and Michael J. Fox both look like 23 year olds with crow's feet.

It was also a direct backlash to the ultra-materialism of the 80's, where the entire purpose of life was to "sell out" and get rich. Integrity? Fuck that, just give me a mountain of coke and all the money. An awkward teenager couldn't really identify with mega-rich rock stars with giant hair singing almost exclusively

Personally, I want to hear "Cherry Pie" accompanied by a precocious ukulele.

He's the one they call *breath* Dr. Feelgood.
He's the one who'll make you feel . . . allright.

For a while they called us "Generation Gap", stuck between X and Millennial. We remember the '80s, but hadn't made it to High School yet.

"Well I think Bisexual Asian Studies should have its own building. The question is: who goes? The math department or the hockey team?"

Having rewatched it just last night, I agree with Tarkin. I still think they needed some full face shots (because it would've read weird, otherwise) but many of his scenes didn't need the camera following him around in close-up.
As for Leia, I FINALLY figured out what was wrong with that shot of her. It wasn't

I once saw a "conversation" between QT and Fiona Apple that was 99% QT rambling at her and 1% her attempting to get a comment in edgewise.

Is he a Good Bad actor or a Bad Good actor?