The important thing is you're learning and, by the end of it all, feel prepared to do what the school and classes are getting you ready for. At the end of the day, as long as you feel sufficiently trained and educated, it doesn't matter if tou get a B or A+.
The important thing is you're learning and, by the end of it all, feel prepared to do what the school and classes are getting you ready for. At the end of the day, as long as you feel sufficiently trained and educated, it doesn't matter if tou get a B or A+.
There's few in Hollywood I respected more than Mr. Poitier. I'm not a handshake guy (too many germs), but it would've been a great, great honor to meet him and shake him by the hand.
January 7, 2026 at 2:36 AM
There's few in Hollywood I respected more than Mr. Poitier. I'm not a handshake guy (too many germs), but it would've been a great, great honor to meet him and shake him by the hand.
I'm a physical media dude. I cherish my old DS9 DVDs, but boy, do I love how condensed, more efficient cases and boxsets of recent years are. But I love the smell of the old cases. It brings back memories of being in college marathoning the show.
January 7, 2026 at 1:20 AM
I'm a physical media dude. I cherish my old DS9 DVDs, but boy, do I love how condensed, more efficient cases and boxsets of recent years are. But I love the smell of the old cases. It brings back memories of being in college marathoning the show.
The sad part is Hugh Jackman is a really good choice for Robin Hood. He's charming, mischievous, and has that Robin Hood twinkle in his eye. Why can't we take advantage of perfect casting? I'm assuming it's the old "today's audiences wouldn't accept a bright, fun, optimistic Robin Hood" bullcrap.
January 5, 2026 at 6:31 PM
The sad part is Hugh Jackman is a really good choice for Robin Hood. He's charming, mischievous, and has that Robin Hood twinkle in his eye. Why can't we take advantage of perfect casting? I'm assuming it's the old "today's audiences wouldn't accept a bright, fun, optimistic Robin Hood" bullcrap.
Begins is my favorite Nolan Batman film. Goyer likes to mention the riskiness of the first hour: Bruce's origins and constructing the Batman persona. It might be my favorite continuous hour in any Batman film. Seeing him slowly build the symbol is great. I almost don't want him to finish.
January 5, 2026 at 3:34 AM
Begins is my favorite Nolan Batman film. Goyer likes to mention the riskiness of the first hour: Bruce's origins and constructing the Batman persona. It might be my favorite continuous hour in any Batman film. Seeing him slowly build the symbol is great. I almost don't want him to finish.