waterballoon--disqus
waterballoon
waterballoon--disqus

Not only does he survive, he has children or clones of children in most of these timelines, and most of them have made their way to the regular timeline. His family tree makes these charts look simple and streamlined.

To be fair, it is.

I agree. Just a couple episodes ago he was belittling Tywin as a coward compared to his "real" father Robert. His whole legitimacy depends on him being a Baratheon.

Haha you got me. Amazing that i read the article twice and missed that both times.

It just seems very odd to write a whole article about what a genius pop art creation something is without mentioning a very obvious visual precursor.

I cannot agree with this enough. Aaron just reeks of trying too hard to be zany.

The Hollow crown was uneven but Richard II was fantastic. Richard III is probably Shakespeare's most fun play, so hopefully this will be good.

Really? Most people i know who watch that show are older and like the more old fashioned, live studio audience, style.

Isn't Doop just a more laid-back Slimer?

Good topic. Dated is just shorthand for "stylized in a way that is no longer fashionable." Too many people refuse to take that into account and are way too quick to dismiss older stuff.

One thing people don't talk about enough is how far the voice acting quality has declined on the show. Even the main actors rush their lines or just give boring reads these days.

My parents wedding rings were just textured gold. I don't know if i'd seen a diamond in person before i was Lourde's age.

I'm sorry but i can't take people who complain about the word honky seriously.

It was Gore Vidal, an uncredited screenwriter for the film, who came up with that idea.

Yeah ending the book before the battle in the north really made the whole book feel like a waste of time. The Barristan and Theon parts were good though.

Am i alone in thinking Feast for Crows is the best of the books? It does without the total bores Dany, Jon Snow, and Bran, and gives us plenty of Cersei and Petyr Baelish scheming and Brienne as Knight errant. Plus the King's moot.

Rodriguez has more of a sense of humor than Tarantino? I don't buy that at all.

The Athenians didn't believe in ridding the world of barbarism. They were trying to help the Ionian Greeks rebel against Persian rule, then began exploiting that comon goal to dominate their naval allies.

What is "true" democracy? Doesn't it become ridiculous when we say that the most famous early democracy wasn't really a democracy?

I know people around here love it, but I really don't think this show handled the war stuff all that well. It all feels much too small and shallow, with a couple of exceptions. This episode not being one of them. It really hurts the show's re-watchability.