Oh, they've got one. Their plan is called "be a rich guy."
Oh, they've got one. Their plan is called "be a rich guy."
Oops, yeah, I meant Holden and Fred Johnson, sorry.
The fact that Pitchfork was interviewing the head of the Grammys is more of a statement about Pichfork's relevance these days.
I also found Dresden's speech to be way more convincing in the books, and the books also gave a clearer sense that Holden and Thompson were being swayed of what he was saying, which in turn made Miller's decision to shoot Dresden make more sense.
Come to think of it, have we ever seen Megan's feet?
Yes indeed. You'd be cow bros.
You're half-right about Salt, and it's not the enjoyable half.
Tana French has a new novel, The Trespasser, out which in a way is her version of Gone Girl (but better, but I don't think Gone Girl is as good as everyone else seems to).
You sure took a long time to say all that
The mysterious backer also seems to share a lot of characteristics with Hubert Bigend, which I almost wondered whether the writers were lampshading with the references to Belgium that are in there.
I really liked it up until episode 10 or so, personally. On the POC representation front, it was awesome to see a show where so few of the main characters were white dudes.
I did like how Turk just randomly showed up on a rooftop earlier in the season though. "How'd you get up here, Turk?" "How indeed?"
Except against ninjas, amirite?
Yeah, and with the timeline of the show she must have had that sling on for all of six hours or so. I'm not super bothered by it, though, it seemed like a little bone they threw to the comic fans, and a pretty harmless one at that.
Yeah. I feel like the show really emphasized that in the scene where Cage goes into the Crispus Attucks complex - it's basically a mirror image of the famous hallway fight in the first season of Daredevil (with a hat tip to Oldboy), only where Murdock winds up panting and barely able to stand at the end of it, Cage…
Yeah, or the brains for that matter. Shades even points this out in the show when they're trapped in the club, surrounded by police with no plan for escape.
I guess I was sort of assuming that the power source was also coated in that thin bulletproof layer of fabric, though the camera spent so much time focussed on it that I was sure Cage would eventually punch and disable it.
I put a link to this article in my comment above, but it's more or less invisible with the styling of everyone's favorite commenting software:
I agree, and the troubling implication it leaves is that the actual real-world BLM movement is just a group of people being manipulated by canny politicians with their own self-serving agendas, when in fact the real thing actually goes out of its way to avoid having a single leader or spokesperson for the movement.
Seriously. And they're not even wearing safety glasses!