Nice try, Christopher Nolan.
Nice try, Christopher Nolan.
When BSG jumped mid-atmo in Exodus Part II I literally jumped off the couch screaming. One of the best scenes on t.v. ever.
Well, I would answer you question by saying that it doesn't strategically make sense. Using others to execute your plans is the sign of a good tactician. Generals don't go into battle themselves. They send troops. If they succeed, you've achieved your goals while minimizing your risk, if they fail you are likely…
I came up with the monkey being .4 years old and the uncle being 3.6, and the rope is 36 feet long
I think I was one of the few people who enjoyed that show. You had to buy into the craziness, but if you do it was entertaining.
You can't throw up an awesome pic like that and not give a source for it. Where is it from?
I feel a little weird pointing this out, but you can see Childs breath condense at 1:27and a few times forward from that.
My opinion of this book oscillated like crazy while reading it. In the end, a solid story and an interesting world. Not sure I have the energy to pick up the second one though.
The event horizon was not beautiful.
It's sad that Michael Rowe can't play Deadshot in the film. He did a decent job on Arrow and I've anchored him in my mind as that character.
There were 65 episodes of that show...
Scarier than Salem's Lot imo.
Yep. That thing was ridiculously scary. The thought of it chasing them as the father and soon moved around.
The Sword's whole album "Warp Rider" could have made this list.
It amuses me you couldn't come up with a way to defend #8
He kills Lupin Once in the first book he's in! (By literally throwing the book at him). How meta.
What is it that he's clutching at?
Not necessarily true. I say this as someone who has tried to explain various logic puzzles to other people I know to be incredibly smart, but they cannot make the step from a simple case to a more complicated one (in this case, the inductive step). Amongst the same group at the same time, other people had no trouble…
Already done, I believe.
I'm not going to spoil it since I know the Blue-Eyed Person problem, but the answer is really simple and straight forward to understand if you consider the base case and inductively build from there. It's discrete math all over again.