Very funny that the King of the Hill revival avoids the question of who Hank voted for by sending him off to an Aramco base for the past few elections, a move nearly identical to the Minions being trapped in Antarctica during WW2
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and may the murderer never know peace. may he face a fate worse than hell.
and may the cops who did absolutely fucking nothing to prevent this die painful deaths.
Help Jonathan Joss' husband.
goal is almost reached but just. do what you can.
I think “Hey, fuck you, buddy. I spent the night learning to riverdance,” is going to be my go-to excuse for everything, now. –AW
“You know why, Bob?! You’re not the boss of me.
marsb1n asked:
Have u watched RWBY?
greatcheshire answered:
I watched volumes 1 and 2 I believe? And I just couldn’t get into it tbh, sorry!
You got farther than me. I only made it about halfway through Volume 1 before I gave up.
Strangely, this is making me imagine a Frankenstein’s monster AU version of Hunter.
(Or maybe I’ve been watching too many Frankenstein movies lately.)
It makes me sad that we know next to nothing about Perry but I always think about his response to his son being expelled is to put on his news reporter voice and declare "Breaking news! Augustus Porter is grounded!" Like objectively speaking, this man must be hilarious. But imagine the shit Gus puts up with on a regular basis
New on the Ponett Gazette: I wrote about rereading Simon Furman's IDW Transformers run! I discuss the highs, the lows, Furman's legacy, and, yes… the disaster that is Spotlight: Arcee, and the fact that Furman kinda accidentally made all the Transformers gay
It’s been many, many years since I last read Furman’s run, but the thing I remember preventing me from really getting into it was the dialogue. I feel like Furman suffers from the same problem as lot of comic writers of his generation where they have a very old-fashioned way of writing dialogue so it sounds really unnatural and kind of dry. There was a lot of interesting ideas in there that did keep me reading, but it was a bit of a slog at times with how boring I found how the dialogue to be.
trooper-924 asked:
If we're talking about Eda and Lilith's family, I've always head-canoned the Clawthornes as being formerly rich. They used to be like the Blights, being very powerful and influential, but at some point they lost everything and Eda and Lilith were hoping that they'd be able to restore their family's wealth/reputation if they joined the Emperor's Coven.
vulturevanity answered:
Interesting take. I never got any “disgraced noble” vibes from the sisters, but I see how that would make for some cool narrative choices.
*eyes my secret stack of RavenBlight headcanons*
I admit, the only reason I think that is because “Clawthorne” sounds like a fancy aristocratic name to me. Like, it just seems like a name that’d be applied to a family of wealthy layabouts who ended up squandering their entire fortune.






