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Screamapillar
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I mean the headline is literally: “Read this: How nerds became bullying PR stooges for the Marvel monoculture”.

And at this point, what with it being the highest grossing film franchise of all time, it’s not really accurate to describe the Marvel movies as a part of “nerd” culture. They’re just pop culture in general.

So... It’s a divisive film? For every person that likes it, there’s another that thinks it’s a cringe-y Scorsese knock-off with some Batman thrown in.

You’re being really unfair. Fox is still the home of a lot of one-season wonders/failures. And now that Disney owns Fox (the film and television studio) I expect Fox (the network) to start really throwing things against the wall in a desperate attempt to make something stick.

And if you look to your left, you’ll see the concern troll.

But there’s not only one episode left. It’s coming back after the Holidays. This is just the first half of the season.

That’s at least partially wrong though. He doesn’t start dating her (at least from Laurie’s perspective) when “Laurie learned that her real father, The Comedian, attempted to rape her mother, before they got together consensually, and conceived her[;]” She doesn’t even know about the sexual assault at that point.

In

When I saw the previews for this episode, I thought Rick was going to end up fucking the dragon. And I was kind of right.

Larry Niven does not know much about the future, based on “The Jigsaw Man”, in which he foresees the rapid expansion of the death penalty in order to provide organs for transplant.

I don’t think we’re getting a whole lot of mileage out of Anne’s family being in the house, but I honestly really liked the way they turned them into an audience for the telenovela energy of Frank and Carl’s baby daddy drama with Ingrid’s husband. That was a bad storyline that’s still a bad storyline now (also the

Not really. Twin Peaks: The Return is pretty straight forward narrative wise with the exception of “Gotta Light?” but I think even that makes sense, more or less, by the end of the season. Saying it’s a puzzle is a bit like saying all of fantasy/magical realism/science fiction is a puzzle. The things that confuse

They’ve said it ties directly into the Doctor Strange sequel. So it’s probably just a one season show.

Clone Wars and Rebels started out very childish. Specifically, I’m thinking of Jabba the Hutt referring to his kid as his “Punky Muffin” (and the kid becoming a walking fart joke nicknamed “Stinky”) and Ezra’s stupid lightsaber/blaster combo.

Him getting back in bed with DC for America’s Best Comics after what went down with Watchmen is hard to reconcile with his and his daughter’s statements.

and that Donald Trump isn’t just a three-card monte street hustler with a better suit.

The Batman movie in the works is supposed to be The Long Halloween.

 “Hey, listen, all these girls showing their a*$ and all kinds of crazy s*%t and I have underwear on in Bali and they took my pic down. It’s discrimination. Like, I understand, I can’t help my size, but you can’t take down my pic.”

Everyone knows that. Why do you “Well, actually it’s not Yoda” people feel compelled to make that comment? No one thinks the baby is Yoda, it’s just that saying/typing “Baby Yoda” is a lot less time consuming than saying/typing “Baby who is the same species as Yoda”.

Counterpoint: One of the celebrities directed an episode of The Mandalorian which heavily featured Baby Yoda. So it makes sense to ask her opinion. And another is national treasure Laura fucking Dern.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, his top ten of this year features a lot of nudity, illicit substances, and devil worship, but for a few fans, one of his selections may give them an initial pause: Joker.

It wasn’t just that it was an Oscar nominee. It had a lot of buzz surrounding it because it was based on a work by the author of Let the Right One In. I’m pretty sure it received a glowing review on this very site.