tonywatchestv
Bart, That's A Bran Muffin
tonywatchestv

Not to be patronizing in any way, but you understand this is an institution people quit in the way of quitting the Mob, right?

To be fair, that never actually happened.

Was he ever considered to be a douche? I was around in that era, and most people - male or female - liked Hyde.

Am I wrong that Kutcher is also attending med school to discover the cure for his brother's illness, or did the internet make a fool out of me?

I don't think that will ever happen.

I tried to correct in the friendliest way the spelling of "congradulations" in the seventh grade, and when we consulted the librarian, he had no idea either way. Dick.

I always looked at Obama after Bush and thought, "Well of course they elected a poet."

I guess I'll just take it down! ..

I know the "The French don't have a word for 'entrepeneur'" was fake, but "Where wings take dream" always took the cake for me.

That's largely been my sentiment as well. Even the Canadian prime minister who abstained from the war not only believed there were WMD's but claimed to have seen "proof". Obviously there's a whole plethora of geopolitical factors at play, but I've always been troubled by the ethical point at the heart of it (that may

I'm not suggesting that it has, necessarily. I'm saying that it's imprudent to lay the same blanket condemnation on someone like Affleck - who settled two civil lawsuits out of court seven years ago - as someone accused or convicted of an actual crime, and more serious ones at that. Once again, I'm not sure why you're

That is such an absurd qualification for an answer that satisfies you. Sure, one can't have it 'both' ways, but certainly two ways that aren't mutually exclusive. I can't believe that you're predicating an argument based on whether or not the internet can sully a person's life and reputation, as if that's in dispute.

I did not at all. Should we go back to your original post?

That doesn't make any sense. Read: Roman Polanski. Hollywood is a separate entity.

Separately, isn't Vin Diesel known as being this super nice, Dungeons & Dragons self-proclaimed nerdy guy?

That's cool. I know it's presently classified as a 'bro' pick, but I've always respected how violence was depicted in The Dark Knight. Allegory aside, you can't portray The Joker without violence, and weird violence. But the film didn't play around in it, and it seemed to acknowledge that it was indeed violent.

I don't have the hindsight of seeing the other Peter Parkers, but I still balk when I hear people complain that Tobey Maguire was too nerdy. That's the point! Remember the cartoons, when he was basically 35-year-old G.I. Joe with glasses in high school and girls would slap the books out of his man-hands and laugh at

There are so many more opinions than your former and latter. I'm not sure why you would argue against the word 'binary' with just two rigid examples of people in mind.

It's kind of next on my to-watch list. I don't mind violence, but I also say that as someone who has no interest in watching Deadpool. It's the infusion of light-hearted comedy that tends to put me off.

I agree we're talking in circles, and I'm not intending to undermine anything. I intend to watch it, and hear it's great. Cheers.