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SoRefined
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I thought the Python-ity extended to Jaime and Bronn:

He does have a VIVID imagination.

The confusing part is that he's better known to us now as Albert Brooks.

I think my first encounter with them was in a high school bathroom in Kansas (where I grew up.)

I certainly never blessed any cheesemakers!

…while wearing a t-shirt that says "It's Adam and Eve, not Adam and Steve."

Jack Chick is rather anti-Catholic, so no surprise there.

Part of the corporate invasion of the religious right is suspicion of environmentalism, with the strange idea that "stewardship of the Earth and its resources" actually means "Humans should use up whatever they want because God will just make more."

Kirk holds up a banana and announces you're all going to hell.

It probably is. When I first head about God's Not Dead, I thought it was a film version of an email forward about a Christian student proving God's existence to atheist professor by dropping a piece of chalk and it not breaking.

Surely both of these creative teams just stole this idea from Jack Chick?

I suppose that would be something I could get through, but it would be better if it meant "I will use your offer of protection to help only myself and facilitate your downfall, just like you did to my father."

I want to be very clear that I am just talking about what fans of the TV show will call it. I believe the on set name was "The Battle of The Six Armies," not because it will involve a literal six armies, but to be reflective of the large size of the battle.

Does "well rewarded" mean "I will marry you," because barf.

I don't know about Rory McCann's personal woodchopping history, but maybe they do it wrong on TV for like… blocking purposes.

I don't think this rises to the level of pedantry, but I think I would have gone with a "typical Americans conflating the US with the whole world" quip here.

Big Walder (the little one) appears to have some access to humanity, at least as far as Theon can tell.

Seriously, in one of the Dunk and Egg stories, you see a very young, like maybe 4 years old, Late Lord Frey and he's already pretty much a sniveling jerkface.

This is so logical and true and it really bums me out, because in my head she's like, reeling off all his betrayals of her family and friends, with the final one being that she knows he betrayed her father and then it's the long trip down.