teacups
Teacups
teacups

I agree. It's attempted sexual assault - just in a way where they wouldn't be blamed if successful.

Well, Snopes said that turned out to be a hoax. The pants-shitting, I mean. No word on the rape and incest.

That's such a great scene. I fucking hate that "silence = consent," mindset where someone knows that they have to stop what they're doing if someone actually says no or resists - but until that line is crossed, they don't give a shit about whether their partner/date/whatever is actually okay with what's happening.

On that note, I want to petition for news outlets to start calling him President Tinyhands instead of President Trump.

Also from that episode, Roman's argument with Casey about the quality of one of his intelligent fungus screenplays was great. I loved when her and Henry start quoting it.

Having lost a friend over this a few months ago, I can affirm that it is even more irritating in real life!

I've totally been there with my dad (who's actually a big fan of Aaron Sorkin) so I see your point. Once I brought up a study I'd read about which had found the same resume was way more likely to get results if the name at the top sounded white. My dad wouldn't stop going on about how this didn't matter, because a

Fair point, but I don't think those two movies, at least, were using Ed Gein's influence as a selling point. From what I've read, Psycho was pretending not to be a horror movie, and The Texas Chainsaw Massacre was pretending it was based on an actual Texas chainsaw massacre.

I don't watch Gotham, but that is the most accurate summary of the first season of Agents Of SHIELD that I've ever heard.

That birthday story is also the plot of a Malcolm In The Middle episode, except they were going to a restaurant, not a spa.

I was hoping to see my new obsession Wynonna Earp on this list. I started watching thinking it would be the same kind of fun, trashy guilty pleasure that Lost Girl was, and ended up finding it to be just a plain good show. And the element I was initially the most unsure about - Wynonna's cliche tragic dead family -

Thank you! The longer version of the theory kind of merges the two - during his first transformation, he attacked Jason. When he told Ms. Grundy he'd woken up in the woods covered in blood, she told him he must've sleepwalked and gotten a nosebleed simultaneously. Then she looked around, found Jason, shot him to

Ghost Whisperer's Amy Acker To Join X-Men Series

I agree about the show mixing different eras, but from the description Betty and Jughead were reading, I think it being a mental institution was just another lie Betty's parents told her. I've read a fair amount about the "troubled teen industry," and the website sure made them sound like one of these programs?

Speculation & Wild Theories Time!

That phrase is literally how I described my feelings last week whenever he got a scene. I get so invested in all the other storylines that I almost forget about him until it cuts to him angstily strumming guitar or whatever.

I'm not sure I'll read this, but the idea of how much it would annoy America's most wealthy ass pimple did make me gigglesnort.

Peter Mullan is the central character, easy. After him… I think it's either Caruso, or the guy who played Mike.

I also think that Wynonna Earp went from a shaky guilty pleasure to becoming unexpectedly terrific, particularly in terms of the way the Earp sisters' backstory developed.

Cool. For the record, I agree that neither death seemed intentional on Joe's part - hitting the dad with the snowglobe was an impulsive outburst, and he seemed to just freak out and run off without thinking about the kid.