vectorious
Vectorious
vectorious

As an atheist, as someone who can remember not believing in God or much of any organized religion since a very young age, comments like this are repugnant and exactly why people associate atheists with hatefulness, intolerance and the same smug attitudes that many like to attribute towards the religious.

I'm really not sure. You bring up some valid points, but I'd be lying if I said I wouldn't feel the same way. I don't automatically think of my husband as my weapon wherever we go, but in a situation like this, I'd be grateful that he was there also. I don't think there's anything unfeminist about recognizing that

I don't think its so much "I want a man around for protection, because man" as it is that the man who is breaking in is most likely much more likely to be threatened/intimidated by a man than a woman, whether for good reason or not.

Yep, and it's not just NYC, but he surrounding metro area as well - Rockland, Westchester, North Jersey etc.

Oddly enough, I've never watched 7th Heaven either, but I automatically associate him with it anyway.

No worries! I saw it and figured maybe you meant to reply to someone else.

A villain though? Maybe he just got tired of Andy punching holes in the wall and screaming every time things didn't go his way. Its not so much villainous as it is just not wanting to further his man-child's delusions of grandeur.

I don't think so. He plays Dennis and Dee's biological dad who is this very generous philanthropist. They basically pretend to be just as generous and caring because they want him to get back with their mom since he's rich and really nice, but in the end they decide impressing him with their fake generosity is too

They were only small parts but he wasn't a villain in Always Sunny or The Office.

I loved her in The Leftovers too!

Um, okay? Nope, what exactly? I never said she didn't.

I looked at him and thought, "hey, I know that guyyyyy". I just happen to be good with faces. Couldn't tell you his name though.

I don't recall saying the ending was different? I'm saying that for some reason, the ending, which felt disappointing to me when I read it, somehow seemed more fitting when I watched it play out on screen.

I really loved the movie. It's one of the few that managed to be just as good, if not better than the book instead of being a disappointment. Casting was wonderful. I loved Margo and the male detective (which was the kid from Almost Famous all grown up!)

Sort of the same situation here. I was packing up stuff in my childhood home and opened up the bookcase-armoir I had and BOOM! They were all there or at least a bunch of Nightmare Hall and Christopher Pike. I dont recall seeing the Fear Street ones and now I'm thinking that they were thrown out without me knowing and

I did! I still have several of them along with my RL Stine and Christopher Pike collection. I never could get rid of them and reading this post makes me glad I never did.

YAAAAASSSSSSSSSS.

This was so nostalgic. R.L. Stine and Christopher Pike ruled my world as a teenager. I even met Stine at book signing and asked him some dorky questions about how to write scary stories. I don't remember his answers but I remember being dazzled by the whole experience

Was How to Make it in America considered crap? I never watched it until it was cancelled (didn't have HBO for a while) and I enjoyed it. Obviously it didn't last long but that's not always a sign of a bad show. It also wasn't so very white so I don't see how it fits in that category.

I'm a total back and shoulders kind of girl and that last picture just makes me go