thepigbelongstoallmankind
The Pig Belongs to All Mankind
thepigbelongstoallmankind

I'm making my way through Sneaky Pete, and I'm really enjoying it. It's actually the first hour-long show I've watched regularly since Breaking Bad ended.

That header screenshot looks like an evil, uncanny valley version of Wallace from Wallace and Gromit.

The mother of someone only 14 years younger than her, no less.

"With plenty of semen" really does sound like something spit out by Google Translate.

I recently took a bunch of my unwanted trades to sell at Half Price Books, in order to clear up some bookshelf space, and make a little bit of money. I decided to peruse their graphic novel section while they priced my stuff, and ended up finding a complete set of the recent reprint of Moore's Swamp Thing, in really

I watched The Man from UNCLE movie, which was a bright, cheery film featuring utterly beautiful people doing silly spy stuff. There was too much of Guy Ritchie's hyperactive editing, but otherwise a fun movie.

The writing's probably not great either. It looks like they're making the common adaption mistake of following the source material to closely. There's to many expositional narration boxes and these four pages could probably be reduced.

That is some odd page and panel composition - sort of triangular shaped (except the third page), randomly sized panels, random overlaid panels, a couple of Dutch angles thrown in.

She really was. Her "FUCK! You're old!" delivery was the funniest part of the movie for me.

Volume 1 of Hellboy in Hell. It's an odd book, very mournful and contemplative, where the antagonists are either dispatched off-page or by the abrupt arrival of hell-whales. It also seems very disconnected from the rest of the Mignolaverse - the denizens of hell keep urging Hellboy to take up his destiny and lead the

John Lewis' March has gotten some interest in previous months, and with the recent goings-on it seems appropriate to discuss.

The trailer played before my showing of Arrival, which seems like it's reaching the appropriate audience.

I don't think we've reached the point where we can erase memories, but there are drugs being developed that essentially remove the emotional connections to memories. They're being used to treat PTSD patients, but I don't think they're widely available yet. Cognitive behavioral therapy is pretty commonly used though,

Are you OK, Han? Do you have a therapist, in addition to your doctor? It seems like you need to talk to someone.

Hey, an interesting subject that's actually relevant to the AV Club's purview that I wouldn't have discovered otherwise. This was actually a great job, GJI.

I think NextDoor is pretty useful. It lets you see local events, it's good for finding babysitters and lost pets, and it's really good for figuring out which of your neighbors are cranks and assholes.

and directed with sort-of-competence by the longtime Roland Emmerich associate Anna Foerster

The fact that you want to argue on the internet just proves you're not really an adult, Vincent.

It's a quote from the Big Lebowsk, dude.

Asbo obviously intended to write a 14-year-old, you pedantic stooge.