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SozerKeyse
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There's another interesting conversation dynamic in many of the posts I'm seeing here: there is a certain type of person who will more actively avoid things that are heavily recommended. I remember a friend who refused to go see Titanic when it came out only because "No way man, Way too many people have seen it. It's

Jesse Hassenger, that's the dumbest thing I've read this week. Shows can tell better stories than movies just because they're longer. Your argument is basically the equivalent of a someone who likes short stories shunning real actual novels because "they're just trying to make you read more chapters".

Ha, worst of it was that right before the concert, because I wanted to check them out I got busted for shoplifting their CD at the local mall. Of all the things in the world uncool to get yelled at by mall cops for…

So, story. My high school in Connecticut used to raise money to pay for a huge spring concert for all the kids in the region to attend, usually we'd get enough to pay off an okay band and we'd send the rest to charity. In the spring of 1992 we had contracted the Spin Doctors to play, but apparently Pocket Full of

The second I can taste your fear is one of my all time moments in music. That along with the second chorus of "Karma Police". Both always give me chills. Bonus: does Franz Ferdinand's "Take Me Out" count?

You guys are all missing why they named themselves Viet Cong.

To be fair, I'm pretty sure Cinco de Mayo was actually started to let people drink away their regrets at marrying known terrorists.

Nobody said Sigur Ros. ( ) has gotten me through many a thousand dreary analysis projects.

Then it would be a great movie about a bunch of people sitting around talking about rebellion but never actually getting anything done.

Tron 3: MegaTronnin'
Tron 3: Dude It's SO Tron
Ultimate Mortal Tronbat 3: Untroncated Cut

Pity that I have trouble even going back and watching Ghost today because those CGI underworld spirits just look so terrible. Breaks the mood every time.

Counting down the months until people finally start realising that The Babadook worked great as a metaphor but was neither scary nor a good horror movie…

You know what else is expensive? No one going to see your all-CGI shitfest because it looks like a derivative cartoon.

I know right?! And then the most amazing other thing happened — because it was so popular people started acting like the movie wasn't really all that impressive to show off how rebellious and holier than thou they are, and posted about how they never liked it in the first place, which they then followed with a list of

Might be, but you're not.

Well hey, sounds like the married couple is happy. As for the two girls who got left behind, what exactly are they upset about? That their fun threesome thing ended? Or did they each secretly want to marry the guy too? Either way feeling bad for them isn't really a thing that's happening.

Attractive, popular people have more sex. Attractive, popular people have more friends. People with more friends text more. People who text more are more likely to use smilies. There's no causality between the sex and the emojis, the thing that's driving both is the popularity and/or attractiveness.

Thank god my work doesn't monitor what I do online or I'dve been out of this place ages ago.
Well, I'm guessing they don't monitor.
Probably.
[Prays]

Great, now I'm going to have City High playing in my head all afternoon.

1. Was pretty much what I was aiming for.
2. I would never.
3. Let me know what you find.