walruss10--disqus
walruss10
walruss10--disqus

There's no way for this story to end other than having Jon and Dany marry for convenience. That said, I was hoping the marriage wouldn't come with immediate romantic overtones. I was hoping they'd be kind of put off, and it would give them an opportunity to put their own wants aside for the good of the realm.

On he one hand, I agree completely. On the other hand, fast travel.

I did think that Patrick Stewart really brought it to a role that didn't deserve him. So… kudos there.

I just got out of it, and it was… good. It was fine. "Old guy protects young girl with spunk" is a trope I'm familiar with and they executed on it well. I'll just say… it's like, I want us to be able to tell adult stories with fantastic premises. Not everything has to be either silly popcorn entertainment or a

I know I'm in the definite minority here, but I thought season six was pretty good (if a bit uneven). One of the good things about Buffy is that Whedon GETS horror. The whole show was campy and kind of lampshading various tropes, but it also played well as a horror show. The best classic horror villains are real

I'm trying to get through Xenoblade X, and I'm enjoying it okay, but every time that weird alien thing talks I want to throw my controller through the TV.

South Park's progressive fan base is weird. The moral wasn't "people are shirty on the internet." The moral was "we need to come to terms with people being shirty on the internet, and stop being such self-righteous Dicks about it."

They all got killed and everyone was like, "huh, I guess they all died somehow."

"Everyone's a dick online." - The premise everyone seems to be missing.

Majora's Mask is by far my favorite Zelda game, but it's probably also the most lore-heavy since it's so linked (heh) with Ocarina of Time. I still think you could probably enjoy it, since all the Zelda games are made to be standalone type experiences. The first few minutes of the game make references to OoT, and

So here's a fun one that doesn't really work out, but is fun to think about.
Pretty young board member is too pretty and young to be a board member. But she is pretty and rich enough to be a rich tourist pretending to play corporate espionage.

He had a conversation involving terms outside the scope of his knowledge. That was the reason for the diagnostic. Which brings up an interesting question: Surely guests have conversations with anachronistic words in them all the time. How often do they have to go through that process?

Eh, that doesn't look like anything to me.

The idea is that we're actually watching two separate park visits, and the show is deliberately clouding the timeline. In one, we see William take some trip with Delores, fall madly in love with her, something goes wrong, and he concludes that there's something deeper at play.

End of season: Maeve lobotomized and reset for her trouble, Delores realizing William has no intention of a long-time thing, and the Man in Black discovering the maze. I don't know how long the show can play coy with the "William is the Man in Black" reveal, so that may be the finale.

I don't think it's any more complicated than "The internet effs you up good."

I don't think that Garrison is supposed to be a literal stand-in for Trump. It's more a figurative version of this election with the sides being: "this guy is an idiot who connects with everyday idiots, while the other person is competent but rehearsed and hard to like" type of thing.

That's a good point about how writing problem in the mainstream media's agenda is most situations, but the truth is facts are the right way that things aren't.

Is it the CW? I can't keep up with you kids and your sex monster programs. (I am in my 20's).

Coming this fall, to the WB!