[www.youtube.com] Thomas Ligotti's short story "The Frolic" does a good job of villainous serial-killer peter pan. here's a trailer for the short film version.
B) 50%.
if there are four answers to a multiple choice question, One of them is going to be correct, so 25% is the correct percentage. for this question, two of the four selections are 25%, so picking at random means you have a 50% shot at selecting the right one.
americanized totoro [io9.com] that would be scary
tiny figures, magnets... I played with something similar called Starcom [www.youtube.com]
three problems with the change
1) reading whole articles via an RSS reader is not an option for me because many of the articles are full of images that require much scrolling to get through to see the next article
2) reading individual articles that might interest me on the website after finding them via blurbs on RSS does not work because a third of the page is taken up by a sidebar that is mostly advertising.
3) Classic View still has the sidebar. This is not classic, and does not solve the problem created by the new layout.

Thankfully, the Nick Denton article has a big display of gawker-affiliated sites at the bottom which will assist in avoiding this unpleasant layout in the future. No more Gizmodo, IO9, or Lifehacker for me.
[www.youtube.com] here's another Violet Sedan Chair youtube, just showing the band listed in a jukebox. the video cuts off before we get to hear any of the music.
What I wonder is if there's a function difference between sticking the magnets under the skin vs taping/gluing them to the surface. a magnet on the surface would be more exposed to any magnetic fields, would still rub against the fingertip to stimulate the same nerves, and be less invasive.
I don't think a good Star Wars prequel would have been possible under any conditions. The point of them was to show how noble kind good Anakin Skywalker, friend to noble kind good Obi Wan, became evil tyrannical Darth Vader.

By itself, that's not a problem. A good Jedi's descent into villainy is the kind of thing that could be an awesome movie, maybe a couple awesome movies, but they waited too long to tell that story, and Mr Plinkett has pointed out the problems that arose when they finally did.

I think a single movie, a horror movie, about a good jedi slowly getting disillusioned and turning to the Dark Side, would have been more fun. like Falling Down, but with lightsabers.
I've heard of doing things like this to treat foot odor/fungus, but not for getting drunk.
It's only a matter of time before Johnny Depp winds up in the electroluminscent plastic armor. Not necessarily as Superman, but as a misunderstood alien misfit that the spookily-normal townsfolk first embrace and then shun, or first shun and then embrace. Edward Glowypants, perhaps.
"The Conspiracy Against the Human Race," by Thomas Ligotti. Started out as a fictional book-that-must-never-be-written in his short story "The Shadow, The Darkness," and then he done went and wrote it!
What about Henry Armitage from H.P. Lovecraft's "The Dunwich Horror"? Does saving the world from the son of Yog Sothoth not count as heroic?
@0035: @MrGOH has it right - the first chart is the political leanings of the fans. Lovecraft fans tend to be pretty liberal sorts, supportive of all manner of deviant practices. Were HPL with us today, he'd probably support the Tea Party.
I find it interesting that Lovecraft and Tolkien didn't make it onto the second map, but also appropriate. They're too unlike anything else, each one's body of work off on it's own, perhaps as the starting points of horror and fantasy maps.
Since this new Crow movie is based neither on the first movie nor the original comics, and the franchise has already gotten so far removed from what made its beginnings good anyway, I will need to be mildly to moderately intoxicated to voluntarily watch any new Crow movie.
@WookieLifeDay: that is a good possibility as well, with the rewind-and-redo being a return to reality.
Paul is the only one in the movie to break the fourth wall. I think he's just trying to give those kids out there in TV-land the most entertaining horror movie possible.

Please notice thatPaul did not bring this magic remote control with him. It was already in the house. For all we know, the Farbers have been abusing their magic remote and Paul is just there to revoke their magic-remote privileges.
I am not surprised to learn there is Icke-inspired reptoid-metal. Cthulhu, Satan, and other destructive supernatural forces have been very thoroughly represented there already, And Dr. Steel references the works of Zecharia Sitchin a good deal, so it was about time the Reptoids/Annunaki/David Icke got some heavy metal representation. \m/
fruit, any kind you like. sliced.
cheese, any kind you like, sliced.

put on plate. eat. I have found that gorgonzola goes nicely with melons, smoked gouda is a nice compliment to apples.
I think David Fincher would be a good choice for any non-Nolan bat-sequels.
We Come from the Future
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