waxlion--disqus
orangewaxlion
waxlion--disqus

The Pringles joke was when they introduced the first ghost (which in hindsight could be a neat Halloween costume) and I thought it did work since it needed to be an easily accessible portable snack that didn't make much noise.

Probably fittingly, it's also entirely incomprehensible for people who are only dabbling? I gave it a shot since I work in a building where a lot of the former Niantic contractors were still around and since I heard that Pokemon Go was going to happen eventually… and I never did actually quite understand what was

Speaking of eating brand names, it's so weird there seem to be more people offended by the Pringles joke (which I sort of loved) compared to the Papa John or Murphy's product placement.

I thought a lot of the non-speaking characters had some hints towards fun backstories but it was a little disappointing how implied or inconsequential they all were, so I wasn't all that engaged emotionally.

The little girl crying over a shoe and impending death was pretty good even if she made some bad choices. I also remember liking the grown up version enough.

MODOK's been in the cartoons right, what does he sound like? In my head I thought I've heard a shrill irritating version but I may have actually been thinking of the oversized talking brain from TMNT.

I forget if it ended up being true but I remember people speculated she was one of the actresses up for the Agent 13/Sharon Carter role in Winter Soldier.

Before some of his more recent styles I had a pretty big crush on him too, since he reminded me of someone I had recently dated at the time.

Does Constance Wu count? I forget if there were any/many Asian gods featured in the book in any context and I forget the new goddesses aside from Media. I also like Dhavernas but I don't know which female characters have yet to be cast that she'd work as.

I thought at least the first season the only awards it won were all from these family award shows that clearly were willing to overlook the cartoon gore. (Was there ever full on bondage gear? I vaguely remember the lead recurring polygamist wife and the dog toys but most of that was all dialogue.)

I'm not familiar with her visual career, she's had like five movies— two of them are for kids, one is presumably a cameo playing for/against type, and I thought one of them was Battleship where she essentially doesn't get speaking lines?

I actually can't remember the character but based on that description it reminded me how family unfriendly Pushing Daisies got by featuring costumes where Chenoweth nearly spilled out of her top. (I'm so gay that something particularly noteworthy must be going on for me to even notice breasts)

I think it has been an issue just we seldom get credit since there are so few triumphs and it's so compartmentalized it gets harder to mobilize (Also see re: racebending)

Bars has an interesting place since, as I understand it, that kind of hypermasculinity is viewed as a camp overcompensation for Japanese people to stereotypically consider as a gay trait. (Then again yaoi is sort of interesting since that's a whole market of gay themed goods produced largely for/by women where at

Not to mention how their Riverdale Archie reboot/adaptation seems to be 90% Twin Peaks if the poster campaign is to be trusted. (Plus it's by the guy who has written the zombie Archie comic and an unauthorized play the company once sued him over—) I'm more intrigued by their branding than basically any other major

I've heard he was essentially run over, which is appalling in all cases obviously but also since he seemed like a great person in terms of acting and off-screen.

Yeah I lean that way too, I've essentially only seen her Weekend Update monologues and while sometimes she made good points, her delivery wasn't really modulated and I assumed she'd carry over that persona. In the movie her character felt way more grounded and responded to things reasonably though and she was probably

Apparently Ellen Page played normal age Han Solo at one of those celebrity improv theater events (a famous person reading of Empire Strikes Back) and she killed it.

I actually really dug the credits of the film and I don't know if that's a recurring Feig thing or just happened in sufficiently big budget stuff like Spy. It somehow managed to cram in a number of actual jokes itself rather than purely being callbacks and in Spy they even used it to establish more details about

He was the guy who worked at Chilton's facility who at some point ended up being conned into trying to kill Hannibal on Will's behalf. (He was also a lot of fun in that weird SyFy pilot Fuller did with Constance Wu in a supporting role)