
I agree, Les Miserables was amazing. I honestly didn't mind Crowe's singing anywhere near as much as everyone else did, although I'm not a fan of his rock band.
I agree, Les Miserables was amazing. I honestly didn't mind Crowe's singing anywhere near as much as everyone else did, although I'm not a fan of his rock band.
Yeah, I can be hard to understand in either language when I'm tired. Really, just in general, but I like using excuses.
I have never played either. I still want to play Infinite, but meh to Borderlands.
Instead, I'll just critique your grammar. "Its" is possesive, "it's" is a contraction of it is. I've seen gigantor21 and a few others do the same thing, and it bothers me more than it probably should.
That is all.
I loved Laupin III's movie on Netflix and even started a relationship while watching Princess Mononoke. Also saw Howl's Moving Castle on Netflix, but wasn't that fond of the American voice acting from Bale and Crystal (no idea what Japanese sounds like). Apparently, Simpsons had an episode commemerating Miyazaki recently.
I've heard Grave of the Fireflies is incredibly depressing.
I agree with your list pretty much, except for Layton (math? hmm...) Radiant Historia (willing to try TWEWY, but not much for RPGs).
I can attest to Ghost Trick and the Castlevania being really fun. I'm on chapter 5 or 6 of Ghost Trick, love the humor and puzzle solving.
I finished Portrait of Ruin a long time ago (pretty fun, but also kinda standard in a lot of ways), currently about at the halfway point of Order of Ecclessia (hard, may start over) and just bought Dawn of Sorrow (so far seems to be the best, but that magic trick thing with the stylus is difficult for me) as far as Castlevanias on DS.
Of games I own, I think Wind Waker is only one I pre-ordered.
I guess it makes sense the Atari version would look like E.T. the Porno.
I actually figured he'd be your favorite.
I think if more people knew about it, there would have been more in attendance, but while I poke fun, I probably would have done the same as those two with the cell phones. Luckily, I saw a banner that simply said "TEDxSFA" and knew what it was and that I wanted to go.
Of course, maybe people knew it would be posted to Youtube anyway and thought "why spend $10 and a Saturday?"
The kid did pretty good and was a better speaker than he thought he was. He brought up points that are cliche but true, like every opportunity being a chance for experience, every failure being a lesson etc. (he may not have said that exactly, but roughly). That thing about standardized testing was definitely true as well, although having heard some of the questions on the TAKS test (again, old standardized test for Texas public schools I never had to take), I'm honestly more worried we have to prepare anyone for that. Specifically, the questions I remember hearing were very basic word problems in math.
It's just that that title alone stinks of a certain pretentiousness. I mean my friend and I are not what I'd call lazy, but we're not about to give a speech to our generation about how everyone else is an asshole. I for one want them all to stay stupid so I can take their money. Y'know, I'm kidding, but when I see people buying holy water from some guy on TV, I think "I don't even think that's unethical of him to lie to you like that; if you're that dumb, you had it coming."