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If you've never experienced a boring blow job, then chances are you haven't experienced enough blow jobs. Either that or you are in the camp that believes that any willing mouth is better than none at all, no matter how unenthusiastically or unskillfully applied. I assure you that lack of either enthusiasm or skill

This goes to show that it is even easier than ever to fool the world's population of gullible dolts who have little to no critical reasoning skills and suck up whatever fanciful story panders to their personal sense of whimsy/doom/paranoia/whatever.

Agree that Prometheus was a waste. Why go to all the trouble to connect the dots with Alien only to get massive details wrong. Like leaving the navigator's chair empty at the end of the film...

This makes complete sense to me. When it was reported that Joss wanted to add another female character to the team, I just knew it was most likely Wasp. Anyone who knows Joss and the kinds of characters he likes to write for could see this as plain as day. A friend of mine kept saying that it ought to be Ms. Marvel,

Indeed I am. CG fx team.

Re: Babylon 5 - I also thought Za'ha'dum sounded suspiciously like Khazad Dum. And don't forget the immortal First One named Lorien.

Hey, I'm making the pixels as fast as I can... :-)

There is nothing intrinsically superior about 24p over 48p. It is merely what I, and everyone who grew up with 24p film, cognitively recognize as the format for cinematic narratives. Higher frame rates look like video, which we associate with news gathering, soap operas, and live events. Our willing suspension of

The X franchise predates the MCU. It predates the notion that a single, cinematic universe can contain continuity spanning many films. But ever since the Avengers "experiment" proved to be successful both financially and conceptually, it isn't hard to see why Marvel would feel a burning desire to save the X franchise

Sure, men like ice cream and chocolate. However, I've met far more women than men who would rather give up sex for the rest of their lives than chocolate. In fact, I've never met a man who would make that choice. I've met plenty of women who said they would. That puts their love for chocolate nearly on the level of

Best exchange:

Iron Dome is not just a practical military defense technology, it is a valuable tool of brinksmanship. Any time there is an imbalance on the battlefield, there is diplomatic/political leverage available. The more one-sided battlefield conditions are, the shorter the conflict usually is. Be hopeful that both sides do

Sea monsters or alien installations? Seriously? I weep for the future of our species.

Agree completely. Killam in particular is being groomed as the next breakout star. He certainly has the talent for it, and you could tell the writers loved him from the moment he joined the show.

I am convinced that Agent Coulson is popular simply because somebody with pop culture influence in the blogosphere decided he was full of awesome and then it became hip to agree with that point of view. But if you look objectively at the character itself or the rather bland, matter-of-fact portrayal given to him, you

She's not a geek girl, fake or otherwise. She is, at most, a geek-in-training. A geek padawan, if you will, but not fully a geek yet. She doesn't pretend to be a geek or lay claim to any of the cultural currency of being a geek. So I'm not sure that sort of girl is what the article is talking about.

What would be an example of a fake geek girl?

You know, it's great and all when the CW reuses its actors, but I still can't look at Pheobe Tonkin without thinking she's Faye (from The Secret Circle). They should have at least had her speak with her natural accent.

It isn't the fault of the fans, really. It is the fault of the producers/execs who pander to them. Fans don't generally understand the subtle physics of character development and narrative; they only understand their own reaction to it. Writers and directors are the ones who, hopefully, understand how to deliver

Rivendell would not have changed noticibly in the mere 77 years between the events of The Hobbit (T.A. 2941) and The Lord of the Rings (T.A. 3018). Rivendell had been around for almost 4700 years by the time Bilbo and Co. set out on their quest; to the Elves 77 years is but a blink of an eye.