Good, I wasn’t the only person thinking this.
Good, I wasn’t the only person thinking this.
“not torching Wendy’s. They’re not looting retail stores. They’re not shooting cops. No, that’s not them, it’s the other people doing that.”
The missing code is from ONE DLC out of dozens they made for this game. I personally would much rather have the game in May than delay it while they wait to reconstruct one DLC that doesn’t even have that much story in it.
Of course there are less expensive options. One’s local public university probably also offers online classes and the ability to complete a degree part-time at per-credit rates that are lower than this (although, depending on the university, not much lower). There are hundreds, probably thousands, of smaller colleges…
White people make up 45% of the population at Yale, and Asians are heavily overrepresented at 22% of the student body. Meanwhile, Black students are just 8.5% of the student body and Hispanic/Latino students are just equal with their representation in the country, at 15.7%.
I think people are amused but legitimately concerned! Or at least, that’s where I am. I want to find her and help her somehow
Dude, read The Hot Zone. Hemorrhagic fevers exist in humans.
I’m black, and I share the same bafflement. I watched the credits all the way through and there were so many black voices who worked on this project. All the scenes with Joe and his family, the barbershop, and the jazz crew felt authentic and warm to me. I do think having 22 voiced by a black woman (like Tiffany…
Oh, I absolutely interpreted 22 as an anxious/depressed soul, especially towards the end. The scene with the swirling people saying the worst possible thing, and 22's madness mantra that she wasn’t good enough, is a spot-on depiction of mixed depression/anxiety.
Yes, the story was meant to feel incomplete, because the implication is that Joe is going to back and live his life to learn those things. Maybe Joe will call Lisa. Maybe he’ll coach Connie into being an amazing trombonist. The world’s his oyster, because he got a second chance and he learned that he needs to look…
I really liked the movie, and I’m also a black woman, and I came to the comments hoping somebody would say this. The whole point of the movie was that Joe wasn’t really living - he was so self-absorbed and concerned with himself that he never explored the feelings and motivations of others, never truly listened. Those…
I didn’t mind Tina Fey but I agree, her casting was what let me know that this wasn’t all-black from the ground up. Which is fine.
It’s Pixar. Everyone is a cartoon guy.
Yes, exactly. People are criticizing it for not being the movie that they wanted it to be.
I had to force myself to finish Wonder Woman 1984. Whoo, that was a mess.
1) This scene is so iconic
I mean, she said it like she thought she really had them there.
People have very short memories.
Apparently “trespassing” in Karen-world is being Black anyplace any random white person doesn’t want any Black people.
And their culture of valuing property over people. Just the fact that shooting someone who may “seriously damage the property” is considered an acceptable action is terrible. Fuck yo property! You can reseed grass; you can’t bring children back to life.