But he had blue balls in his heart!
But he had blue balls in his heart!
I think that the addition of "The" makes this fictional band different from the real band known as Nine Inch Nails that exists in reality.
"Beat Box" is not the Art of Noise's only hit if we're counting U.K. charts.
Brian Posehn's podcast Nerd Poker is pretty good—he and his friends are funny, and it's literally them hanging out in his kitchen, eating pizza and playing D&D.
Outside of the liberal vs. conservative debate, the show is corny as hell and just isn't very funny.
I played the original T-rate game with my kids. Don't think I'll do that with BG&E 2.
The characters in Beyond Good and Evil say "motherfucker" now? Uh, okay.
Lynch likes to linger on shots and have his actors just stand there holding their action longer than other directors would see as necessary.
I used to be really irritated by the young Asian woman in the commercial who texts a fist emoji and to explain it, says, her voice dropping with vocal fry, "It's like, 'Word, Chevy'"—but now I wonder if she was purposefully acting like that troll the commercial makers.
But Weyland was stupid, too. 1. He stowed away on his own goddamn ship. 2. When post-op Shaw entered his "secret" room (that apparently 90% of the cast knew about), she is covered in gore and half-naked—yet no one, including Weyland himself, bothers to ask, "Hey, what happened to you?"
Season one of Glee was good, but that show went downhill after that. Scream Queens tries to pass as camp but is just terribly, painfully stupid. And, as you said, AHS has worn out its welcome.
Cipher isn't a Matrix-y handle.
Cipher (or Cypher) is the actual handle of the character played by Joe Pantoliano in the first Matrix movie.
I'm sure some people have a phobia of clowns, but I think many people fear clowns partly because it's a popular thing to do so now, just like it's popular to watch YouTube videos, eat Oreos and Doritos, and listen to 21 Pilots.
I'm sure some people are actually afraid of clowns—since people have all sorts of phobias—but I do think a lot of people fear clowns mainly because that's a popular thing to do right now, much like watching YouTube videos or listening to 21 Pilots or eating Oreos and Doritos.
I don't know for sure, but I think it's a chicken and the egg thing where you can't say for sure if Pennywise et al made some people afraid of clowns or if some people's fear of clowns made Pennywise et al.
Saying that you're afraid of clowns is like saying that you hate Nickelback or that you love bacon.
Stop motion? I haven't watched all of them, but some feature puppets.
No, but "Thatcher and AIDS" are plural.
Even more graphic spring break footage:
https://youtu.be/a2i77YEMQrQ
"This is called slapping the bag."
*slaps bag*
😐