tedthefed--disqus
tedthefed
tedthefed--disqus

So why not just ignore them? I've always been so bewildered about why there's this desire to act like people who think other people are racist on Twitter have all this power.

Can you really see Trey Parker and Matt Stone getting real-world repercussions for that, even now?

I have extremely lost what the point was that is still standing.

Oh, okay, I misunderstood when you said "that was great before the twitter wars."

That was probably not the same individuals?

OK but sex tapes aren't rated, and if they were, they wouldn't be rated R?

No, it defends the argument that people tolerate half-assed, libertarian bullshit as long as Clinton's going to win so nothing matters, and they get fed up with that shit real quick when there's travel bans and Betsy Devos.

I think the problem, more than anything else, is that they think that they somehow don't have a point of view: they're truly neutral. "Hey, we hate the bad things: political correctness and religion. That's not a point of view; it's just common sense!"

I gotta ask for clarification why over-simplified, unnuanced political stances have ever been good.

You don't understand, they FEEL GOOD ABOUT THEMSELVES for doing something PARKER AND STONE DON'T THINK IS NECESSARY.

Part of it is their main go-to joke is "Look at the hypocrite!" (even though that doesn't in any way serve as a coherent attack on a point of view). Trump has rendered himself immune from being called a hypocrite, because he doesn't coherently stand for anything.

I mean, or you could keep posting TV reviews about a TV show because it's what you do?

I checked, and "Last One Out of Beach City" aired last year, and everything that comes after the best episode of a show will always be a little disappointing.

And 13 Reasons Why.

Mystery Science Theater season 11 is a pretty glaring omission.

I think it's as simple as this: He was an athlete in a culture of masculinity where claiming women gained you social capital and self-esteem, and his father probably enforced masculinity very strongly. Maybe becoming a performer and actor, with its potentially unmanly connotations, left him with a deep need to prove

The highs are high and the lows are pretty decent. Pretty good season of TV.

….why did they do this? The AV Club plugged the hell out of the kickstarter and I think there was a huge crossover between backers and commenters here. Why not do real reviews?

Hey, how come you guys didn't review the new episodes?

I see your point, but there's a lot of "fuck Joss Whedon" sentiment in these comments… I know it's easy to read criticism as character-attack, but some people really do seem very mad at Joss Whedon.