A new arrival…arrives. Related Stuff:
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By Lisa Fary – In this episode, Col. Telford, Col. Young and Mrs. Young have the most awkward threesome ever. That’s a new off-label usage for the communication stones.
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By Taralyn Frasqueri-Molina – Legend of Neil is a webseries created by funnyman Sandeep Parikh (Zaboo!) and bankrolled by Atom.com and Comedy Central. This snarky gem is about Neil from Trenton (first impression, very not heroic) who is transported into the original Legend of Zelda video game and assumes the identity of the game’s hero Link. This leap into the fantasy realm doesn’t occur in magical poofs, but instead happens when Neil, drunk off cheap beer, is cranking the love pump while simultaneously asphyxiating himself with a Nintendo game controller.
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Just got these in my inbox a few minutes ago. Awesome, totally worth the click, movie preview madness after the jump.
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By Lisa Fary – The music seeps in from the hallway. My head plays Peaches silently in combat. Each moment I can, I pick up Sarah Kuhn’s book, One Con Glory, and read a few pages, creating a cone of normalcy – foul-mouthed, geeky normalcy – around my folding chair.
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(plus The Guild Halloween Special) By WorldofHiglet – Last week was Halloween, (in case you didn’t know!) and to celebrate The Guild released a special bonus episode. This is a very funny episode and was written by Kim Evey (Producer). This is also the first episode not written by Felicia Day.
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By Lisa Fary – Did everyone involved with writing and production have hands of lead? ‘Cuz there was a lot of heavy handed nonsense here. Get it? Heavy handed? Lead is heavy, and if someone’s hands were lead, they’d be heavy hands. Hence, heavy handed. That’s the kind of heavy handedness at play in V.
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By TrinityVixen – Remember those string maps that Future!Hiro made to mark out where and when everything went to Hell? How come he couldn’t figure it out with all his careful planning, but our Hiro, brain-tumor and all, manages to change the past without royally screwing the future inside of two minutes? Even Samuel makes mistakes, which I wouldn’t previously have thought possible, so how does Hiro manage not to? Or has the future changed already and I just haven’t noticed because my own past has been rewritten? Does this mean One of Us, One of Them never existed? (Oh I hope, I hope, I hope!)
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By Sylvia Bond – I get it, I do, that sometimes a show will have an off week, an episode that didn’t go exactly according to plan, and I’m willing to adjust my expectations to the reality that is. But this week, the ep that Show produced was so very disappointing on so many levels, I came away feeling like I’d been gob smacked. My friend in Alaska always says to me, “You should watch Show with lower expectations and turn off your brain, and that way, it’ll be more fun for you when it sucks.”
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By Lisa Fary – The sand devil from the desert planet in “Air, Part 3” made it aboard Destiny and is super thirsty this week, gulping up 40,000 liters of the water supply and attempting to provide microdermabrasion services to the crew.
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By Jenn Kim – So FlashForward presents an alternate reality. Not because, you know, the whole world blacked out and saw their future for 2 minutes, but because Dominic Monaghan is suddenly a swarthy, smarmy, sexual creature who beds hot blond strangers of the female persuasion on trains. And does it by talking the dirty physics talk to them.
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By Lisa Fary – What’s more stressful than putting yourself through the National Novel Writing Month gauntlet? Publishing the day’s work in a public arena like Pink Raygun. No plot, no problem? Ummm. OK.
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