thedukeinjapan--disqus
thedukeinjapan
thedukeinjapan--disqus

Bob's bizarre voice on this line cracks me up every time; this is definitely one of the lines my friends and I quote all the time.

Kylie Minogue and New Order
You pointed out that Shakira seemed to have lifted the melody of her song from that Bangles track, but the similarity between "Can't Get You Out of My Head" and "Blue Monday" by New Order seems way more obvious, as well as being basically acknowledged through mixups and live performances.

As another law student who also should be studying for a Constitutional/Criminal law exam, I'd ask say Hank watching Jessie for days hoping he'll lead him back to the RV so that he can conduct a warrantless search would be rather dicey, since it's not a search incident to arrest - as he's not arresting Jessie - and it

Drolz is on the money. The Wire was "slow to develop" in the sense that it was slow to unveil or fill in the background of its characters, but it immediately introduced the plot thread that would carry through the whole first season, the Barksdale organization, through D's trial. This plot thread was then used to

Matsuo Basho
Should count haiku in mora
And not syllables.

another good article in Salon
Makes all the points quite well:

Yeah Drolz, who are you to offer an opinion in a comment section of an article evaluating an episode of a show on a site dedicated to opinions on pop culture? You must love a show without reserves or keep your opinion off of this opinion section of an opinion article of an opinion site!

What with the not feeding them and then burning their corpses, I don't think Lee thought to much of his whores. His whole thing was trying to be a white man anyway.

Yeah, I believe Alma said this to Sophia as they sat together in the room upstairs.

Trixie quotation
>"I lived most of my life a whore. And as much as he's her misery, a pimp's a whore's familiar. So the sudden, strange or violent draws her to him. Not that I wouldn't learn another day." - Trixie

I agree; everyone always talks about how hilarious this guy is, which makes me want to give him another chance, and then each piece is just as lame as the last time. Irony and satire aren't funny without being used to actually make a point (which is why just saying something awful and ill-thought "ironically" is

Hahahah…thank you for reminding me of 2001, A Space Goddessey…

@Matt M:

"The MOST people!" (not "blowjobs")

I was thinking more of the original TTOMO appearance on the WPCBC Network: