The lazy racism in the Lucille episode is bizarrely terrible and out of place.
The lazy racism in the Lucille episode is bizarrely terrible and out of place.
Give us an Astro City film! Samaritan is pretty relatable, he's just a human from the future.
A.V. Club panned Dredd. 'nuff said.
Sounds like this film won't be having a Victory End.
In a country where the most visible Filipino in hip-hop is the guy from the Black Eyed Peas…
I think it's because they're foreigners.
I saw a blonde dude slave too.
The latest anti-SHOW STEALER PRO TRIAL VERSION DRM technology was not well-received by viewers.
An actual realistic movie about Google for this year would be a cross between the Bourne Ultimatum and Skyfall.
Guy Pearce, then?
If they cast the Dornish with white Europeans (okay maybe swarthy Italian/Spaniard Mediterraneans is passable), I'm gonna throw a fit.
Then it means those creepy ladies were leering at the Blackfish at the wedding knew that he was gonna get it… yet they wanted it from him. Gross!
I like how the professional musical cameos are as characters who are henchmen to the really evil guys.
My favorite ASOIAF fan theory is that Ned Stark is somehow still alive. It's just so out there.
What's with GRRM using magic to resurrect people in the books, anyway? I can understand if it was an anomaly like the Brotherhood of Banners guy, but if you apply it to prominent characters then it just turns into a comic book where death is meaningless. Save it for WildCards, big guy.
It's still not technically debunked. She is a deniable asset, and actually a liability after she got pregnant with his heir. Maybe she was acting suspicious and guilty in this episode intentionally so the showrunners can throw some ambiguity on her true nature? It can be one of those story things that can be…
So basically Robert's Rebellion was kicked off over a misunderstanding?
Why did they tell her about the plot? I thought only the men of the household would know what was going on.
George R. R. Martin is a big Animorphs fan.
*somewhere in the Crownlands, a distant uncle who the king was named after in the first place keels over*