I kiss boy.... -cats.
Gratulatione! Having taken Latin for four years, it's truly difficult to study a dead language.
Go to Disneyland and Universal Studios. (I believe it's a decent drive from there...)
I'm drinking a V8. This stuff does not taste like vegetables.
Catch-22 was both great and horrible for me at the same time. It's great because of its brilliance in satire, but horrible because I could not for the life of me read more than one page per night. I would read the synopsis and get the themes down, but actually getting down to it was pretty hard for me to grasp. Naturally, it was our teacher's favorite book. x: Recently for Modern Drama, we have read Mrs. Warren's Profession and it was probably the first book/play in a while that made me not want to read it almost entirely. Because the playwright was so picky about his technical way of writing (such as putting spaces between letters and italicizing some of the stage directions), I was reading half of book thinking that this was a terrible editor. Thusly, it put me off quite a bit for the next two acts and never really got into it at all. Sure, provocative in terms of the ethics of prostitution in Victorian England, but there is just so much dense dialogue between characters.
No.
Ah yeah, that's true, I forgot. I mean, they kind of have to make the effort to redub 358/2 Days, so I don't think it would hurt to bring back them voice actors for just those few lines. But, I agree that Xemnas should still stay silent.
Curious to see if they'll re-voice the extra scenes from Final Mix or just leave them silent with subtitles. If the former, I would imagine Haley Joel Osment redubbing all of his lines again. Well, I'll take any news nowadays for this project. I'm hoping this is released somewhere around my birthday hehe.
Ops, double post, but here are the winners of last night's Awards Ceremony: 1. Best Picture: “Argo.” 2. Actor: Daniel Day-Lewis, “Lincoln.” 3. Actress: Jennifer Lawrence, “Silver Linings Playbook.” 4. Supporting Actor: Christoph Waltz, “Django Unchained.” 5. Supporting Actress: Anne Hathaway, “Les Miserables.” 6. Directing: Ang Lee, “Life of Pi.” 7. Foreign Language Film: “Amour.” 8. Adapted Screenplay: Chris Terrio, “Argo.” 9. Original Screenplay: Quentin Tarantino, “Django Unchained.” 10. Animated Feature Film: “Brave.” 11. Production Design: “Lincoln.” 12. Cinematography: “Life of Pi.” 13. Sound Mixing: “Les Miserables.” 14. Sound Editing (tie): “Skyfall,” ‘’Zero Dark Thirty.” 15. Original Score: “Life of Pi,” Mychael Danna. 16. Original Song: “Skyfall” from “Skyfall,” Adele Adkins and Paul Epworth. 17. Costume: “Anna Karenina.” 18. Documentary Feature: “Searching for Sugar Man.” 19. Documentary (short subject): “Inocente.” 20. Film Editing: “Argo.” 21. Makeup and Hairstyling: “Les Miserables.” 22. Animated Short Film: “Paperman.” 23. Live Action Short Film: “Curfew.” 24. Visual Effects: “Life of Pi.” Welp, most of these fulfilled my predictions. Seth MacFarlane as a host was interesting to say the least. And Disney rules the world of animation again. But overall, I think there was a healthy amount of good films for this year's competition.
Edith Can Shoot Things and Hit Them by A. Rey Pamatmat It's an interesting play about three kids trying to live on their own. Surprisingly, the themes are quite controversial, and they even made a warning in the beginning that the kids should be played by young-looking adults. But nevertheless, I randomly chose this book for pleasure and I was quite satisfied with the feeling it left me at the end.
The real question is whose idea was it to put Atlantica in at all?
I talk to myself. A lot. I have no friends. :c
Only he could read the entire Terms of Agreement and make it sound like poetry.
All this dang technology these days... Welp, bye-bye savings account for the next couple of years...
;-;
Maybe you were a woman in a previous life... if you believe in that stuff anyway.
"The farmers had won. Not us."