spaghettilee--disqus
Spaghetti Lee
spaghettilee--disqus

In all honesty, I'm kind of wondering why there hasn't been a really big high-pedigree Cthulhu movie, or Lovecraft in general. Copyright issues?

So are Space Dandy's, for that matter.

This thread is funnier than the movie could ever be.

Fuck you mang. White Sox all the way. See, some of us have good taste in pizza and baseball teams.

Chicago-style pizza should not be called pizza. It's tomato-sauce stew with a thin layer of cheese on stop. The sauce:cheese ratio in pizza should never approach the milk:cereal ratio in a bowl of cereal. And god help you if they use that nasty sweet tomato sauce that's more like applesauce than anything. Pizzas

I save all my adventurousness for porn.

"Really, you have to give it some air and sip it slowly to appreciate the full range of-" FUCK YOU, I'm trying to get drunk here! That's why I skipped that over-hopped monstrosity and went straight for the whiskey, damn it!

Those can be fun to hate-read, though. I know that makes me part of the problem, but I can't help it.

You know you've made it in life when someone will sit down for an hour and listen to you talk about your 15-year-old self jacking off.

What's up with all these fictional characters who travel back in time and decide to stay? Is losing running water, antibiotics, and feminism really worth the chance to be seduced by some ponce in a cravat who only looks good in comparison to drunken 21st-century dudebros? (Is there a British equivalent to 'dudebro'?)

You know, I've never had a jet ski lesson in my life!

I'd agree up to Metropolis Zone. Fuck you, fucking exploding starfish.

I'll take any of the 'life is awesome, go and live it!' anime pitched towards people half my age: Fairy Tail, Eureka Seven, Gurren Lagann, etc. Some dark moments at times, but the sense of optimism never goes away.

Perhaps they picked an obscure one on purpose to avoid the millions of skeptical shit-talking fans you'd get from Bleach or whatever.

What school if you don't mind me asking? I'm hoping to get into one myself.

I can't say I've been there long enough to know if it really works or not, but they do brag about lots of success stories where amateurs came to the site and eventually got published. There's also a lot of essays and resources on publishing, finding an agent, working with editors, etc., so it feels geared toward

I have an account on LitReactor where I publish chapters of the book I'm working on. It's a teen-focused fantasy-adventure story, but I promise I'm not doing that just because that's where the money is. I'd highly recommend LitReactor by the way: the membership fees are kinda pricey, but everyone there cares a lot

Yeah, this one hits pretty close to home. One of my many fears about the future is turning into that sort of person.

Well yes, but it's all about the experience of having the physical book in your hands and turning the pages and such. You know, just like the original tweets.