tmd42--disqus
Tony
tmd42--disqus

I don't like cheese, yet I love pizza, cheeseburgers and quesadillas. I don't get it either.

My parents liked The Simpsons, and somehow they let me watch them…for a while. Then they didn't want me watching it because Bart was "rude" and the adult themes. But somehow I convinced them that my 3rd birthday party would be Simpsons-themed. Again, I don't remember any of this, I only know from my parents' word and

Current inhabitant! I'd say the show is the most accurate and sensitive portrayal of the border I've watched, but the accuracy it sacrifices in certain areas sometimes baffles me or just strikes me as unnecessary. I would prefer if the show took a look at the cities in a more objective, Wire-kind of angle, but it's

Adults before I entered High-School: You're going to love High-School. They'll be the best four years of your life.

People love their "Hachiko", though. But yeah, it seems like everything he's done since "What's Eating Gilbert Grape" is pretty much the same movie repeated over and over.

Next thing you know, he will pull a Soderbergh and instead make stuff for TV…again.

Thanks for the support! Also, I've not seen this movie, but having a character make a big deal about not immediately following through with a novel he wrote at 21 is kinda silly. Most if not all of the writers I like or love seem to take their sweet time coming up with something new or at least publishing it.

Thank you, thank you. I'll be here for fifteen minutes.

Now I understand why everyone is so concerned about George R.R. Martin's health.

Settle down.

I guess I qualify as a "millenial" (I'm 24), and I'm very happy that I'm at least a bit different than I was a year ago. And being honest, I'm scared but also very happy about having my whole life ahead of me. However, knowing people who've already married, divorced and had kids or that are already living on their own

If his life had a face, I would punch it.

Neither does Hombre Murciélago as he's sometimes known around here :(

The thing is, that's how things are in the border or in Mexico. It's a problem that's been going on for years, and with people in pretty high places suspected of being involved. It's pretty grounded in historical realities about the Mexican-American border. I do agree that in some way, this is becoming the "It's a

In my own personal experience, I've heard them talking in german, english or spanish. They're mostly known for talking in german or in the language of the Tarahumara, though.

Same here. I'd like it if the show left us with the idea that Tate would just horribly tortured and beaten by everyone in the jail, until he just dies. But I also don't want them drawing this out forever.

You'd have to ask that to anyone involved in organized crime. A lot of them are into it because of the thrill of it all, more than anything. The money is obviously good, but that's where their logic fails me, because a lot of them have to lay low anyway and don't get to enjoy it. A lot of times they're aware they

If I have a beef with this show is that it doesn't form a greater atmosphere in terms of weather for itself. The weather on the border is very extreme; either it's VERY hot or freezing, with insane amounts of rain or snow if we end up getting them. For the dramatic scope of this show, that's something it could exploit.

A few things that struck me about the shootout with the kids:
1. The whole thing was pretty much a play-by-play of some of the massacres we had in Juarez and that sometimes we still have: Young people partying, then all taken down by a hail of bullets. The most infamous case was the Villas de Salvarcar one, where it

I've only seen the movies from her scripts, and besides "When Harry Met Sally" and maybe "Silkwood", everything else she's written either was or seems mediocre (I've not seen "Julie and Julia" which people seem to like in general.) "Bewitched" is probably one of the worst films I've ever watched, and much like "You've