turk96
turk96
turk96

Damn, that’s good.

Apply to a.v. club my dude. This comment could be a featured article and is way better than anything they have up right now.

Well-put.Jimmy doesn’t like people getting physically hurt: the second episode of BCS has him risk himself with Tuco to save the skater bois even though there was no benefit to him for doing so. But everything else is on the table, even if he is initially uncomfortable with it: Francesa tricking Hank into thinking

really enjoy this take.

Something I just realized after finishing this episode: Jimmy is always at his most vengeful when people attempt to hold themselves accountable. Note how his true rage at Howard started when Howard confessed that he felt responsible for Chuck’s death. When Kim comes in to sign the divorce settlement, his performance

He got it. I got it. Anybody with half a brain got it. We also all got that it’s a stupidly bad metaphor that doesn’t work the way you think it does.

Who the fuck let you out of the grays?  Crawl back under your bridge, you Nazi troll.

Yeah, remember when both sides of the aisle shoveled Jews into ovens, locked children in cages, and shot black kids in the back for fun?

You liked your own comment, didn’t you? I have a lot of trouble believing there is another person on earth who would read that clumsy attempt at a metaphor and would choose to star it.

No, I got it, it’s just a terrible metaphor. First of all, writing and surgery are not equivalent to each other — nobody lives are on the line if you write a bad story. Second, you make “bad tweets” to be the equivalent of “dirty, oily hands.” But that doesn’t make any sense at all, since “bad tweets” don’t impact his

That is one of the worst takes I have ever heard. Your metaphor is bad and you should feel bad.

Yes how could they possibly

I guess you haven’t seen the actual, literal neo-Nazis parading through the streets. You know, the ones that Donald Trump, the President of the United States, said there were “very good people on both sides,” referring to those protesting neo-Nazis and the neo-Nazis themselves.

(written and illustrated by Howard Chaykin and Roy Thomas, respectively)

About the tattoo scandal—this has bothered me for some time. How is it that like 30% of college football players leave college with about $10k worth of ink, and nobody wonders where the money came from?

Equally serious question.

I think the death penalty is completely appropriate to give now—not because of Joe or Sandusky—but because of the PSU fans.

You can cheer, but the team still actively supporting an enabler says volumes about where their moral compass is at. It’s the same reason I don’t really care much for football anymore: Way too much morally repugnant shit allowed to go unpunished in the name of winning.

You’re free to root for who you want, but I don’t see why you’d want to root for a team that actively honors a man allowed children to be sexually assaulted for decades because he considered that preferable to embarrassing his program.

Not until the school stops “honoring” him and the cult members stop with the “He was innocent” bullshit. Otherwise any mention of the school and/or football team brings that crap out again and again.