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    It stinks!

    Don't forget "Hush." Even people who hate Season 4 have to grudgingly admit that that was one of the best episodes of the show, just like even people who hate Season 6 have to give props to "Once More With Feeling."

    I think Adam should be "this guys" or maybe "these guy."

    I think the idea of a Frankenstein-inspired Big Bad would have worked really well if other seasons had had a werewolf Big Bad, a mummy Big Bad, etc. But coming between "authority figure ascending to demonhood" and "literal god" he seemed like both an odd man out thematically and a dip in the escalation-of-threat that

    Yeah, I always thought the joke was that they've all heard her name at one time or another, but none of them except Charlie care enough to remember it.

    The characters actually had dialogue in the scenes I described. I thought it was clear I was just giving enough information to make it clear which scenes I was talking about (and they aren't the only scenes in the movies either, for the record) not providing detailed transcripts.

    In the first movie, Storm and Jean (and Cyclops) run into the room when Rogue freaks out after accidentally absorbing Wolverine's powers. In the second movie, Jean, Storm, and Mystique are part of the campfire planning scene. In X3, Callisto, Arclight, and (not yet played by Olivia Munn) Psylocke are recruited by

    If you don't count most of the other movies, the animated series, or the comics since the early 80s, then yes.

    I like to think it's the first part of a two-part pickup line - like a woman's equivalent of a guy asking a woman if she's from Tennessee - but she lost her nerve or was too drunk to remember the second part, which would be something along the lines of "Well, you autistic something in me!"

    Yeah, the person I saw it with and I couldn't believe how late it was when we got out of the theater - it didn't feel like that much time had passed at all.

    They should call it the iCompensate.

    I once heard a podcast where one Scottish person was trying to explain to another what the thing that Americans call a "sidewalk" is, and he kept referring to it as "the pavement," and after a while it sank in that he wasn't being descriptive, "pavement" is actually their word for "sidewalk."

    Apparently it is a thing (at least according to some articles I just Googled). The theory seems to be that it's a combination of not letting their own emotions influence how they analyze other people and needing to learn how to read other people in order to function. Supposedly it's why they make good salespeople.

    It's entirely possible I'm having the false memory (or remembering something said on Talking Dead, not the real show). For what it's worth, the Walking Dead Wiki says "…his occupation prior to the outbreak is unknown…"

    I know, right? I'm starting to think that Negan guy's not all there in the head.

    You rang?

    That would be an issue if the Oscars were like the Olympics and gave out trophies for second and third place, but what difference does it make if the best and second best movie of the year are both dramas when only one of them can get the best picture award? And if a movie isn't the best movie of the year in its

    Isn't it a thing that sociopaths are better at reading other people than most non-sociopaths? I could swear I've heard that.

    That's the same lie he told Abraham and everyone else in the main group to convince them to protect him (the reason they were heading to Washington in the first place). He's admitted it was a lie and that he was actually a science teacher.

    I don't think Negan killed Carson because he believes she's dead, I think he killed him because he believes Carson helped her escape (though if Dwight had been able to retrieve her Negan might have been more forgiving), and when Carson apologized, Negan took that as an admission of guilt. If he'd maintained his