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Wint3rFir3's Replies
I still don't think he seems that scared of clowns in the clown room. He knocks on a clowns face and calls it stupid. He later shows some fear of Pennywise when he jumps out of the coffin, but it's not anything extreme, like he's terrified - it's the kind of fear anyone who wasn't scared of clowns would have of a supernatural creature who magically appears out of a coffin and comes at you.
I might agree if the government's answer to everything wasn't to simply charge more money to pet owners, which essentially solves nothing.
A big part of the problem of homeless domestic animals, aside from pet owners not having enough money to care for them, is that a lot of people are put in a situation where they aren't allowed to keep a pet in, say, the rental property they want to move into. So if you have to choose between having an affordable home, or having a pet and no home, obviously a lot of people are gonna get rid of pets so they can live. Maybe if the government would demand more landlords allow pets to be housed on their properties, this wouldn't be as big of an issue.
Happy New Year to all. And to all a Happy New Year!
The slightly warm, raisin-packed kind? Nay. Nay af.
Unless you're talking about like a cream sponge cake with fresh fruit on top - that I'd yay the heck out of.
Thank you. It needs to be acknowledged.
If you have Snapchat you'll see almost all of these women in articles on there regularly, but it's never for something related to their professions. It's just because they exist.
Same - this year wasn't great for film imho.
I got some pleasure out of seeing:
1. Wonder Woman
2. Power Rangers
3. Table 19
4. Coco
That's about it. I can't even say these were amazing films, just that I got some enjoyment out of watching them. I think TV is where it was at this year. Did you see Glow? Loved that show.
HM: PattiCake$ was not bad.
I have an unfair and unreasonable loathing towards people I’ve never met, namely celebrities. While I know it’s unfair and unreasonable, I can’t help but maintain this loathing and have some sort of ‘I’m right though’ mentality about it, as though they deserve it. (I’m not even sure what I’m right about, tbh).
Sometimes I think victim-blaming is just an excuse to avoid being held accountable for your choices.
Can we just admit millenials and older generations are as effed up as each other, just in different ways? I’m sick of hearing people talk about millenials as if they invented all the damn problems.
I hate animal enclosure ‘attractions’ like zoos and aquariums. They just seem like prisons to me – why do we take kids to them? It’s weird.
I don’t understand the popularity of most popular celebrities – Beyonce, Johnny Depp, Ellen, Chris Pratt. Like, why?
I reckon God would actually be a really cool guy to meet. He would probably wear comfortable jeans and drive a motorcycle.
The sea is good to look at. Below the surface, the sea and everything in it: terrifying. Yes even dolphins.
We spend too much time online, me included. Too much damn time.
I'm choosing a bunch of people who I just think oversaturate all media outlets. They're not necessarily untalented or bad people, but I feel like they're not relevant anymore and I'm confused when I see them.
Bella Thorne - I know you're an actor, but why don't you actually go act in something and then we can have articles about that, kay?
Bella Hadid - what even do you do?
Selena Gomez - oh, look Selena Gomez still has a face! Let's read about that...not.
Rita Ora - Just, what?
Beyonce - She has been around since I was a kid, and I'm not a kid anymore. I know I'm in the minority, but I don't listen to the same singers I did when I was 10 and I don't want to be listening to Beyonce when I'm 70.
Ellen - Again, I know I'm in the minority but like why is she famous? Why? Lots of people have talk shows. Talk shows are generally shit except for the free stuff you get.
I hear you, and I definitely agree with you. But when someone dies, it has to impact who is left behind and that has to be someone, so why not Joyce? It would resonate even more because she's been paying all this attention to one son, and not the other. And it would help segue into the obvious relationship forming between Joyce and Hopper, as he will be someone who she'll lean on.
If it's Steve for example, who will care? Nancy for like 10 seconds? Dustin? It has to be someone that affects many of the main characters in the story.
...yet he never really exhibited much fear of clowns. He seemed more scared of a poster showing he was dead/missing than clowns. Dunno if the writers have ever seen a scared child, but they didn't show that with Ritchie at all. With or without visions he never actually seemed that scared.
Not really, because none of the characters were well written, some were just given more screen time. For example, when Mike was on screen he was good, but what the hell was his story? He loves sheep? I thought the actor who played did fine given that the writing was bad.
I agree with you on the Upside-Down world fascination. It gave the show this kind of mystical aura and mystery that was dampened by the whole 'let's add a billion more monsters, yet make them a far lesser obstacle than that 1xdemogorgon was in season 1'.
El going to the Big City seemed to me like a boring, but necessary chapter in a novel. You probably won't like it, but you need to read it to understand everything it sets up later.
I was more disappointed by Dustin sweetly raising a demogorgon - it does what Jurassic World did and makes what is supposed to be a terrifying monster, not so terrifying or so monstrous.
Still liked it though. But season 2 overall felt like build up to season 3, and just a little too angsty overall for my taste.
It was creepy, but they were making a statement about the era, not the person. Having a random one night stand in a stranger's house and it being safe was a thing. Just like Eleven hitching a ride in a truck and it not turning into a news story was a thing. It wasn't cute or funny. It was awkward and kinda weird but that was the 80s.
I'm gonna guess Jonathan will be the one to die, if any. I think it would be the most surprising death, and yet somehow make the most sense.
Jonathan has kind of been 'lucky' in a sense - he was there when Barb died, but didn't even sense the demogorgon. His house was supernatural central and he basically saw and heard nothing, to the point he thought his mother was crazy. Up to now, he hasn't had much interaction with the 'light company' and that was pretty tame compared to the guy who got shot in the diner in season one or the kids for that matter. And he hasn't really had to fight much, so he's not a hugely necessary character.
But he's also been a key witness to the terror inflicted upon his brother, who's been an almost target of the supernatural other world, and the others, so he knows exactly what everyone else has gone through. It would just make sense if he was the one to sacrifice himself for Will. He is connected to almost every main character in the show, so there are enough people within the show that would be devastated by the death and it would have a big impact. But he also has like no friends and isn't deeply connected enough to the story that it would impact the whole show for the worse if he was gone.
I like the character, he's a gentle soul, but he is the one I think should go if any.
I agree with the OP. She absolutely had to have known. So did her mother.
All I can really think is that young Coco probably went on her own adventure in her youth trying to get answers about her missing father and failed - considering she was dealing with a murderer who was also a celebrity, I doubt she was able to get anywhere near de la Cruz. Not to mention she was working around her strict mother, who was anti-music. Eventually, she grew old. Maybe we need a Coco 2 to explain this?
Let me get back to you - I just heard of it and am about to give it a go.
It's got problems for sure, the same problems the comics had I would say, but I find it surprisingly good. I thought this was going to be more for tweens, but it isn't - it has depth, complexity and a downright darkness to it while still maintaining a story-line fit for a teenage audience, which is who it's meant for, and I can't help but applaud that.
Same. Can't say I mind teen-oriented shows, but I was not expecting much from this one, which looked geared toward a younger audience when I first saw the trailer. But it's actually a lot deeper and darker than I was expecting and it works really well.
I'm sorry I can't give you actual minutes, but in Layman's terms...too effing long.