My comment was in response to what the assistant producer said. Specifically, the very last line.
But you all do you.
My comment was in response to what the assistant producer said. Specifically, the very last line.
But you all do you.
He’s describing liminal space. It has nothing to do with being tricked into thinking you’re on a space station. It’s about being somewhere our brain knows should have lots of people, but you’re alone.
I’ve walked through train stations late at night and had those moments before. A gaping maw of a walkway meant for rush hour pedestrian traffic… completely empty and silent.
Edit: ??? I guess liminal space is really upsetting for some people.
The headline makes it sound like people are scared to report crimes because they don’t want to talk to RoboMallCop.
“Oy, mate, you need a ticket!”
It was super effective!
Why does everyone in that picture look like they’re standing in front of fun house mirrors?
(I know what the obvious answer is, it just caught me off guard.)
Continues to play The Sims 2 like a boss
I believe you meant to say; “Vegetarian space socialists who are always right.”
“Oh no, the consequences of our own actions!”
Wasn’t it the last Sims games made by Maxis as a separate studio? Isn’t that why everything after it felt so lifeless?
checks
It was the last major Sims title released while Will Wright was still with the company. That would explain it.
Maxis continues to exist as a studio under EA, but most of the original people are gone, including the founders.
Getting shot by a redneck or getting probed by Elvis, take your pick.
Stormfront without super powers.
Bashir: “Friends? Sure.”
Garak: “I’m working on the ’benefits’ part.”
“Two and a half…… two and three quarters……”
“His pattern suggests two-dimensional thinking.”
Eloquently put.
What is the deal with writing headlines that don’t come across as valid English? ‘Cave Man’ speak is easier to read.
“For Their Transfer of Ballistic Missiles to Russia, the US and Multiple European Countries Impose New Sanctions Against Iran.”
Easy.
Let’s hope five days really means five days.
I love the “almost immediately” part. There’s that brief moment in between where you stop and realize what you’ve done and the dread creeps in.
That’s an episode of the original Star Trek.