I approve of anything involving Matt Bomer. Humina.
I approve of anything involving Matt Bomer. Humina.
That sounds amazing. Although it destroys a small piece of my soul when I have to order it out loud, mojitos made with Stoli Strasberry are also amazing. Then I just replace the dead part of my soul with vodka, which is as it should be.
"Firehose choreography" is my new favorite band name/double entendre.
Thanks!
Thank you!
Expectations terrify me.
I can't decide whether to fuck or hooray this shit, but my depression as gotten a whole lot worse, to the point where I'm incapacitated every other day (fuck), but I'm taking proactive steps by getting on meds and taking a sabbatical from work (hooray)! Also, I just started watching The Good Wife, which I really like,…
Blech. People are the worst. I'm so sorry.
My job is 95% done via email, but my boss gives me such crap for working from home. Come to think of it, he's probably justified…
I spent a good chunk of time yesterday thinking about if I could quit my job without having another one lined up (THE FEAR). My goal for today is to stay conscious and employed. We'll see how that goes.
I want to quit my job. I can't quit my job. This sucks.
I'd forgotten that the movie came first! I've seen a filmed stage production of it, and all the chemistry is off. Julie Andrews was really straining her range at that point, no Robert Preston, an incomplete Mancini score. Plus, wasn't the mid-90's a doldrum period for Broadway? It had a lot going against it, sadly.
I hope it makes it into this week's list. The story really lends itself to a film adaptation, so it's not a huge leap from stage to screen, but it's just such a lovely movie.
Another of the functions is setting legal precedent. I get that you're advocating for some compassionate relief in his particular case based on his particular situation (I, personally, do not agree), but decisions in one case can be used in future cases and can have far-reaching repercussions.
Part of the function of the criminal justice system is to demonstrate to society as a whole that there are consequences to breaking the law. It's part of the the reason why some crimes have no statute of limitations. One such crime is failure to appear post-conviction. As I said before, he can continue living his very…
I agree, but I have to be in the right frame of mind for his stuff. When I am, his stuff is a hell of a lot of fun. Just haven't had a hankering for that kind of movie since Django hit Netflix.
If you do, do what Joey.blowey did and break it up into two parts. I have a feeling I would've liked it more if I hadn't mainlined the whole 3 hours.
Because after admitting to drugging and raping a 13-year-old girl, then fleeing the country before sentencing, not imposing any sort of consequences would send the message: If you have enough resources and wait a while, we'll just ignore those pesky crimes.
I also just watched it on Netflix for the first time.
Obnoxious as hell and I would like my three hours back.
To each their own!
My nieces wanted to try it the other day, as they quite enjoy Madagascar and all its spin-offs. The CGI is actually painful to watch. We turned it off after 5 minutes.