Take a look at a population density map of the US. A lot of the places that don’t light up are agricultural. If for some reason you have never seen a real farm before and always wanted to then by all means come on by, but we call them “flyover states” for a reason. All the cool tourist destinations are in the glowy bits.
I assume you were asking for tourist reasons anyway. If you were just asking for curiosity sake, it depends where you live. I live in the rural part of Illinois and it only takes 15 - 20 minutes to get to a supermarket by car, but walking there is completely out of the question. Especially with the hills. Oh God, my feet hurt just thinking about it.
These taste almost identical to regular Pepsi. It’s kind of a ripoff.
No, painted dogs are something else.
Good riddance.
Don’t forget Animal Planet, which hosts shows about tree houses and mermaids now.
I mean, Hitler had an underling named Himmler. Sometimes coincidences happen.
It’s not symbolic. The tan coat guy is a serial killer who preys on young naive children, not a metaphor for any real world corporation.
Are you referring to The Legend of Rah and the Muggles? That was found to be bullshit the second people read the book. It’s an extremely weird story about nuclear fallout, talking animals, and a shit ton of meandering filler. The only similarity was use of the word “muggle”, which doesn’t even mean the same thing in both stories. JK may be a TERF now, but she is not a plagiarist.
He’ll always be an incel in spirit
That’s when you get bofa deez nuts removed.
This doesn’t sound real. This sounds like a lazy comedy sketch from 10 years ago.
By the way, as someone who hasn’t been under a rock recently, kids still play with toys.
In history, sure, the idea deserves criticism. But in fiction this archetype is called a protagonist and its very different to tell a story without at least one. Is Sherlock Holmes an example of Great Man theory? Most people are not as gifted as he is. What about Robin Hood? I’d argue that these characters share a lot of traits with Batman and Green Arrow respectively, so why is one ok but not the other?
As for the status quo thing, I honestly don’t know what to do about that from a storytelling perspective. “Guy who shoots lasers decides to enact social reform” is an odd pitch.
Supervillains consider themselves to be superior to the common masses. Superheroes don’t see it that way. They see their power as a tool to help those who weren’t as lucky as them. The superpower lottery is a vehicle to tell the story. The moral is about how those powers are used.
Don’t bring my favorite song into this.
Ever see a dog or cat run across the room super fast for no reason? Zoomies.
The sign on the right goes hard.