
I don't think I have a favorite character overall. My favorite in Xillia is Elize's toy Teepo, though.
I don't think I have a favorite character overall. My favorite in Xillia is Elize's toy Teepo, though.
It is fun. South Park also looks fun.
The Geographic has always been my favorite magazine. If Jason didn't get it (his yearly Christmas gift from my grandma), I'd be reading it at the library.
Cosmos is Jason's favorite TV series of all time. We were eleven and ten when it came out, and it was one of the few TV shows my mom would let me stay up to watch.
Boyd (the boss) is an egotistical control freak who refuses to listen to the rest of his team and they get frustrated when they know something but he won't listen to them. The yelling and infighting continues through the series.
Blame it on the sucky weather. That's what I'm doing.
I'll have to keep an eye out for it this summer when I once again have disposable income.
Well, being a life long 13th generation New Englander, your hate does seem kinda unreasonable and frankly a little hurtful. Major sweeping generalizations bother me.
Curse you, Chris! Curse you! I had just managed to exorcise "I Can't Go For That" (heard in thegroery store five days ago) from my brain with mass doses of Aimee Mann and now you've brought it back! Going to have to go find The Dropkick Murphies this time, I'm afraid.
You've just never been properly introduced to old Will. I hated Shakespeare with a passion until I had a decent teacher who told us what was going on in the plays. They're full of sexual innuendo, wonderful rude Elizabethan words, murder, and other hijinks. That said, I am not a fan of his comedies. His tragedies and histories are wonderful. King Lear and Henry V are my two favorites, but Othello and Hamlet are great, too. Romeo and Juliet and MacBeth, not so much. The other issue with Shakespeare is that they were never meant to be read by anyone other than the actors playing the parts. They're meant to be watched. If you can find the Masterpiece Theater version of King Lear with Sir Laurence Olivier, I highly recommend it. Also, Kenneth Brannagh's Henry V, which may well be one of my all-time top ten movies. Brannagh did a really good job with Much Ado About Nothing, as well, and like I said, I'm not usually a fan of the comedies.