@2
my best Rod Stewart anecdot isn't special, but here it goes. My best friend, around age 11, was the youngest in his family. So he had a Brother in Law who was around 40 years old, who lived in NYC. And he told us the story about walking down a NY street, and he bumped into a guy coming the other way. he looked up, and it was Rod Stewart, and they had a second or two of disgruntled eye contact. The End.
Story involving Loy Reed to be featured in the next installment of : Another Stupid Slog Comment
"Eye got" is fun. Even less sensical typos are fun. I think we've all been doused with the vomit of our Slog overlords. Their prissy anal grammatically correct "reporting" to please their overlords the NYT, creativity has been crushed in the name of all these stupid "conversations" about race and gender and shit the media continues to hammer us with. Fuck it. There's no learning from these conversations. Everyone sticks to their ideolgies, never flinching. So free the typos!! Except for Dave Segal, his dis descriptive writing is so shitty already, it feels like continuos typo reading that crap. Somebody tell him to pick up a guitar, and put the pussy pen down, Get groovy with The Faces, or die with your piss Lester Bangs imitation.
Paul, a farm shop is the building at a rural high school where students take farming-related classes like animal husbandry. It is essentially a barn, sometimes with a separate classroom with lab-style tables and chairs. [Insert "The More You Know" GIF here.]
The Episcopal book store is for Episcopalians, right? They're not generally science-denying idiots. They marry gay couples (in the USA).
Frank Miller: What I got out of Sin City was that he felt the only useful women were prostitutes and that torture was awful when someone else does it but really cool when you do it. It was really cool looking though.
I don't understand this thing where people imagine that somehow feminism has banned men from doing things like opening doors, complimenting, and being protective.
(Most) women still love these things (from the right person, at the right time, and done in the right way) from men who treat them with respect. The only people who imagine that women aren't allowed to have the parts of the traditional male-female dynamic they like unless they're willing to accept the parts they don't like (ie being treated like dirt) seem to be a bunch of out-of-touch pundits.
If Frank Miller is finding that women don't take his unsolicited compliments well, I'm guessing it has more to do with him radiating creepiness when he gives them than any song Rod Stewart sang. I liked the first Dark Knight comic a lot BTW.
If I were trying to zero in, comic-book like, on when Frank Miller went awry, I'd say it was in anything he's written or touched since the mid-1990s. If the new "Sin City" has even five watchable minutes, it'll be the best thing he's done in twenty years.
my best Rod Stewart anecdot isn't special, but here it goes. My best friend, around age 11, was the youngest in his family. So he had a Brother in Law who was around 40 years old, who lived in NYC. And he told us the story about walking down a NY street, and he bumped into a guy coming the other way. he looked up, and it was Rod Stewart, and they had a second or two of disgruntled eye contact. The End.
Story involving Loy Reed to be featured in the next installment of : Another Stupid Slog Comment
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JZqWX-E7…
Sounds like Frank Miller knows he's llllooooooozzzzzzinnnng her.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ld228IoU…
https://twitter.com/lhfang/status/502159…
Actually one of your better ones.
"I would like to be
Home
I would like to go
Home and to the places
Where people like me
It is really hard to"
Ehhh.
Frank Miller: What I got out of Sin City was that he felt the only useful women were prostitutes and that torture was awful when someone else does it but really cool when you do it. It was really cool looking though.
(Most) women still love these things (from the right person, at the right time, and done in the right way) from men who treat them with respect. The only people who imagine that women aren't allowed to have the parts of the traditional male-female dynamic they like unless they're willing to accept the parts they don't like (ie being treated like dirt) seem to be a bunch of out-of-touch pundits.
If Frank Miller is finding that women don't take his unsolicited compliments well, I'm guessing it has more to do with him radiating creepiness when he gives them than any song Rod Stewart sang. I liked the first Dark Knight comic a lot BTW.