I mean, you never know. It’s easy to extrapolate that since each episode has been a new decade of sitcom styles, and we’re clearly at least getting an 80's episode based on the header image for this very article, it’s not a huge stretch.
I mean, you never know. It’s easy to extrapolate that since each episode has been a new decade of sitcom styles, and we’re clearly at least getting an 80's episode based on the header image for this very article, it’s not a huge stretch.
501's are not baggy, they are just regular jeans. If 501's classify as “reasonably baggy”, then we are truly lost to skinny jeans.
My mom hated it, but eventually caved and bought me a Sega Genesis with the caveat that I couldn’t play violent video games. I would rent games periodically, but I don’t remember playing all that much until I was older and had a TV in my room - more or less N64 onwards. She still gives me quite a bit of shit about…
Yeah. Those had/have a 23" opening, and were the smallest they made back in the day. I had one pair that had a 26" opening, but I didn’t like anything bigger.
Yeah. In my late 30's, I doubt I could pull it off anymore (as much as one can pull off Jncos), but fuck, why did every jean manufacturer decide, seemingly in unison, to chop the baggy jeans off the top and replace them with skinny jeans?
I was ready to adopt dadcore for my music tastes, but on a hunch I looked it up, assuming that since everything has a *core now, dadcore would exist.
Mid-late 90's. And shut up, they were NOT bell bottoms, they were a uniform width all the way down! And some were only moderately baggy, and didn’t look like you were wearing a dress. I will admit that they looked a bit crazy on the smaller, spindlier kids that wore them, but for me (6', 190 lb football player) they…
Dad Rock has such a wide net, though. I’m old enough to have an 18 year old kid without it being remotely off-putting how old I was when said child was concieved/born, but I don’t think that mid-2000's metalcore and deathcore would be considered dad rock.
Yes, Crystal Method is the Bones intro. And Massive Attack did the House M.D. song. I think you’re onto something.
It was similar to the bizarre lengths people would go to in anti-drug fiction to try and get other people to take drugs.
I’m wondering if they are even going to continue this for much longer with the eras/decades of sitcoms.
There’s a lot of that kind of stuff in the show. Seems like every episode has some kind of joke/nod towards antiquated ideas of gender roles.
They are very long, but maybe it’s just a D+ thing. Mandalorian has long end credits too.
It does work, though. I have to assume the number of people not eating (or eating) at Chic-Fil-A for political purposes is overall fairly small. I bet most consumers don’t even know anything about CFA’s politics beyond being them being closed on Sundays.
By that logic, every Star Wars and Batman game have been movie tie-ins?
I think most of them just lack self-awareness and for whatever reason, nobody tells them. For some of them, fighting games (or Magic, or whatever) are really the only things they do besides go to school/work, and sometimes we can kind of lose track of how we smell when we smell ourselves all the time. There seems to…
You can argue the quality of the game, but regardless of how you feel about it, it’s not a movie tie in.
Ah, yeah. I figured there was one I forgot. Gets hard to remember which ensemble movies individual characters are in sometimes.
Wanda and Vision are in like... 3 movies? My memory is fuzzy, but I think Wanda and Vision both show up in Age of Ultron, and then not again until Infinity War/Endgame. If you’re not familiar with the characters, I don’t think it’s unreasonable for a MCU TV show to expect a base level of familiarity with characters…