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The problem is this vehicle shouldn’t really exist.

Last year they showed the 2-door Gladiator concept. This one appeals way more to me than the 4-door model. Well, that is if I can get it for mid-$20K. Looks like with the Wrangler base model, there’s a $3,500 upcharge adding the two doors. In theory, that would drop the Gladiator to an even $30K, which still seems

make it a 2 door and I would be sold.

Don’t forget the fact that Mahindra actually has the license to the original Willys Jeep and has had that license for a long long time

If it had a year number appear at every scene change then a lot of people (myself included) would have criticized the show for treating me like an idiot.

Which is why there’s no need to be vague about it.  That’s my point.  

The issue isn’t so much that it’s a difficult puzzle to solve.  It’s that it shouldn’t have ever been a puzzle in the first place, because there’s no reward for solving it.  

That’s kind of the issue though, isn’t it? Westworld was specifically vague about its timeline because that was necessary to build the mystery it was selling, and it seeded the clues that built up to the big reveal.

Yep. By the end of the first show I was checking to see if I was missing a year designation in the corner of the screen that I was overlooking. While I figured it out in short order, I have some grasp of Witcher history from the games. A novice would have been rightly confused.

If you have to create a website to explain your series, something went wrong somewhere along the way

The entire events of the show span over 50 years, in other words, something the timeline does a much better job of conveying than the show, since Geralt and Yennifer themselves don’t age.

I really liked the show, but good lord was ANYONE thinking when they laid out the timeline?

Counterargument: HONK

Untitled Goose Game may well be one of the funniest games I’ve ever played. There’s just something so hilarious about being a complete asshole of a goose.

I don’t think it mattered what his diagnosis was or what meds he was on. The point that I got was that yes, mental illness left untreated can lead to bad things, and that cutting funding or reducing resources to those in need has tangible and sometimes serious consequences. Put that in the extreme context of an

“He just seemed like a depressed loser and murderer with no real justification for his actions.”

Maybe pay attention next time you’re in a darkened movie theatre. 

Most people suffer from mental illness. This was exploring someone with a severe illness, how he had very little supporting him up, that he could be a somewhat functional member of society as a result, but once the supports(medication, therapy) started to be taken away, him mental state deteriorates. As his mental

The film is an examination on mental illness from the sides of one dealing with a severe case and from the side of how society and individuals deal with those that have it who need the most help.

General thoughts (largely avoiding The Joker “controversy” here)

1) 2019 was a great year for film, one of the best in recent memory. I absolutely adored many performances, films, scripts, and direction.

2) The Best Picture nominees are FANTASTIC. I have seen three of them already and have been planning on seeing five

See, on one hand I would be inclined to agree that the praise Joker receives is being graded on a rather generous curve, but on the other hand watching the sheer levels of COPE on behalf of AVC writers and commentariat has been absolutely fucking hilarious.