It's a shame Adam Baldwin is such a total nut. He played Jayne to perfection.
That's definitely not Comic Sans. It's similar -- you can compare the screenshots in the image -- but I'm guessing it's a licensing or cross-platform thing and they're using a Google webfont?
I genuinely enjoyed Night Country until it became clear they weren't going to answer the questions they raised. I liked the cast well enough, really enjoyed the setting, liked the music (despite the general consensus) and thought the character interplay was fairly good - if sometimes melodramatic.
I went into it confident that the intrigue would be resolved, but it just petered out. It could have been great, but the longer you watch it, the more you feel like they wrote every episode as they went along and painted themselves into a corner.
I don't feel the narrative of the second season of House of the Dragon stood up to the first, but the "worst show of the year" seems a little melodramatic?
I'm from the UK. I found this funny, unreservedly. But I honestly really wish Americans would drop the "Cockney" thing and take the piss out of modern British accents instead. We've got a million of them and most of them are comic - let's let Cockney die?
Reach the objective, whatever way, or fail.
This really isn't very representative of early Assassins Creed. It's generally been chock full of very specific instructions - some mandatory, some optional for partial synchronicity -- "Don't alert the guards", "You have 90 seconds", "Use smoke bombs 5 times", etc.
The thing is, the Assassins Creed series doesn't have its roots in RPG gameplay. They've shoehorned it in in later games, but it's always felt surface-level and cheap. Going back to telling a definitive story, in which you as the player enact the action, is a good thing in my opinion.
This reading works incredibly well in the trailer, and the tone and ascending hysteria achieved is excellent, but I have to say that I think Holmes missed the natural meter of Kipling's poem. As I read it, Kipling was very much imitating the rhythm of the footfall of marching feet, and that's absent here.
I'm Baphomet, and I approve this message.
I'm going to assume you're being wilfully ignorant but not trying to be an ass. "Gay" is more often used of men than women, and it's perhaps more common for people to use "lesbian" for gay women, but it just means homosexual (or sometimes more generally not heterosexual), regardless of sex or gender.
Cambridge: "sexually or romantically attracted to people of the same gender or sex"
Merriam-Webster: "of, relating to, or characterized by sexual or romantic attraction to people of one's same sex"
Oxford: "sexually or romantically attracted to people of the same sex"
Brittanica: "sexually or romantically attracted to someone who is the same sex"
Wiktionary: "Possessing sexual and/or romantic attraction towards people one perceives to be the same sex or gender as oneself."
Cinematography was on point, acting was excellent, score was cohesive and evocative, dialogue was well-written and compelling. I just have no idea who the target audience was.
I think Abramson is referencing his own popular thread here on Bluesky.