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The Bourne Valedictorian
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If it's based solely on looks then my vote is for Micheal Harney (Healy from Orange is the New Black) considering I thought it was him the first time I saw Bannon.

It's the most punchable face in Hollywood! It actually surprises me that the teen-dystopian future thingie that he was in didn't do better, seeing as how he actually got punched in the face in that one, and it was immensely satisfying.

I legitimately forgot Grenier was in it until I read your comment, and even then I had to think about it for a minute. It's like he's so forgettable my brain actively tries to erase any memory of him, even when it knows he's in a movie.

I'm with you on Streep, but Portman was pretty much a lock as soon as Jackie was released.

A non-white decent what? You seem to have several adjectives but no actual subject here. It's very confusing.

I haven't seen anyone mention this yet, but the Nazi 'war-room' is an obvious homage to Dr. Strangelove, yes? Some of the angles and shots seemed like exact reproductions.

I guess they can't just rename it "Canadian Apparel" because that just makes everyone think of very heavy coats.

I assumed it was some sort of "no true Scotsman" inside joke…

Oh yeah—I watch so much of his stuff on youtube that I forget he's actually on TV…

I think you'd have to go all the way back to the Carson days to really have it count as high at all.

Now you're just talking crazy.

Because he's likable and can talk to people fairly easily? I don't think the bar for "late night talk show host" is all that high anymore frankly.

This is going to be the weirdest four years ever. I mean, he's not even officially in office yet and a pee story with hookers has gained traction!!! Even if it's not true it's trending enough that people seem to believe it's possible—FROM OUR PRESIDENT!!!

Watching that she seemed pretty pissed.

It's like he pissed on her head and told her it's raining…

Yeah that's true—my favorite part of the whole series was (I think it was) New Avengers with all the history of how the skrulls managed to infiltrate. The event itself never felt as big as it should have, and that's probably due to so much of it taking place in the savage land like you mention.

I genuinely think you can describe every book written by Millar that way.

I actually liked Secret Invasion (though I wish it had an ending since it started off so interesting).

I can just imagine the conversation:

I was in Peabody once for a few days for work. They had to explain the pronunciation to me a few times. I was reminded of the quote from Louis C. K.—"it's not an accent, it's a whole city of people saying most words wrong"