The series with the magic item home shopping network is amazing.
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The series with the magic item home shopping network is amazing.
Shadow Madness on PS1. Unlikable characters, incoherent story, bad graphics, and boring gameplay. It was like someone drew a better JRPG from memory.
I have a thing for anthology movies. A few small stories with connected themes or settings rather than one long story.
The Ballad of Buster Scruggs, Sin City, History of the World Part 1, Creepshow, and Heavy Metal are all great examples.
I’ve seen that one in my podcast app, but my backlog is still so long. Might be good for nights that I just want to zonk right out though.
The thing I like most about LeVar Burton Reads is that it’s basically Reading Rainbow with the occasional “fuck” thrown in there.
And yeah, Tim Harford’s smooth voice is a much-needed balance to the anxiety inducing content of Cautionary Tales.
If you liked Norsemen, I’d say give Plebs a try. It’s another historical sitcom, about a group of losers in ancient Rome.
I prefer single voice, storytelling podcasts. I listen to them as bedtime stories a lot.
I could be down for small beer being the main thing we drink.
You know, I find the most erotic part of a woman is the neurotoxin dispensers.
I have been called a pig, and I am frequently in a pickle. I feel so represented.
Jim Butcher. He sits firmly and unapologetically in his fantasy niche, so if that’s not your thing you may be disappointed, but the man writes good dialogue and he can turn a phrase.
They’re even better raw!
Comrade Crow, vol. 1: An Attempted Murder
Call me crazy, but the fever wank is a great wank. You feel so cleared out, and it helps you sleep and recuperate.
Wait, when did Michael Cera play Chekov?
A reverse microwave. I can heat a cup of coffee in 30 seconds, I want to chill a beer in 30 seconds.
Patton Oswalt. I love that nerdy little hobbit man when he really gets on a rant.
All I’ve wanted Square Enix to do for 10 years is remake Parasite Eve 2 and Vagrant Story.
Because otherwise we wouldn’t have Walter Murphy’s “A Fifth of Beethoven”.