- then Transformers director Michael Bay announced that, in his upcoming reboot of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles franchise, the shell-shocked antropomorphic heroes would trace their origins back to another planet. Fans were livid.
- now After months of anger, several social media…
This is fucking amazing.
8-bit “Community” game might become a reality after all
Reddit user Britta-Bot has set to work recreating “Journey to the Center of Hawkthorne”, the 8-bit title featured on NBC sitcom Community’s season finale. While the title is in it’s early stages, featuring little more than a handful of maps and characters seen on the show, Britta-Bot plans to introduce health and inventory systems, new maps, and more in future releases. Community fans, this is definitely something worth checking in on from time to time. (thanks to LaughterKey for the tip) source
I want to go to there.
— In Defense of Chris Hayes
Conor Friedersdorf
— Lizz Winstead, during an interview with Mother Jones
— Ron Paul, explaining why he turned down his own Secret Service detail, during an interview with Jay Leno on last night’s episode of the The Tonight Show.
(Source: livewire.talkingpointsmemo.com)
Jon Stewart: “Fox…shut the fuck up about how victimized you — and you alone — are. Nobody cares.”
—
Rick Santorum • Rebuking another round of criticism from television host Bill Maher, during an interview with Fox News’ Sean Hannity. During his show on Friday, Maher claimed Santorum wanted his children “locked up in the Christian madrassa”, because in public “they could be infected by the virus of reason”. When asked about the comments Santorum replied, “all of a sudden, if you’re instilling faith and teaching them about God in your home, you’re a madrassa, according to these folks.” The Arabic word roughly translates to “school”. source(via • follow)
Unfortunately, neither realized that the only time the word “madrassa” carries a negative connotation is when it’s being used by bigots.
(Source: shortformblog)
There’s a cultural meme or cultural suggestion that Washington is boring, that policy is boring, but it’s important stuff,” says Ezra Klein, 27, another policy savant, who launched a blog when he was 19 and whose meritocratic rise—he is now a writer for The Washington Post and a contributor on MSNBC and Bloomberg View—has made him a wonk-world folk hero. In his view, The West Wing served an important cultural function by dramatizing “the immediacy and urgency and concern that people in this town feel about the issues they’re working on.”
Or as Kurt Bardella puts it, “This was a show that made even the census compelling!” It’s true: the census episode, despite its being the census episode, presented an affecting argument about institutionalized racial inequity and postmortem marital obligation. (You can imagine the lessons reaped from, say, the attempted-assassination plotline.) Bardella, 28, served as a spokesman for Representative Darrell Issa, Republican from California, for about two years. Like other West Wing devotees, he found that the actual Washington didn’t always measure up to the Sorkinian version: “It’s funny because I ended up working on the Oversight Committee—which has jurisdiction over the census—and I can tell you, the census is not the most exciting topic in the world.”
Harold & Kumar star Kal Penn braved similar disillusionment when he took a break from acting to work in the White House Office of Public Engagement. As he told The New York Times last year, “I was there my first night until 11 P.M. and I was like, ‘Sweet, let’s order Chinese food.’ And everybody was like, ‘You can’t actually order delivery to the White House.’ I was like, ‘But they do it on West Wing!’ ”
"— How Aaron Sorkin’s West Wing Inspired a Legion of Lyman Wannabes
Juli Weiner
If you’re still confused by the anger that so many feel towards The Help, and its White Savior imagery, then check out this panel from Melissa Harris-Perry’s eponymous show on MSNBC.
— Rick Santorum, commenting on President John F. Kennedy’s famous 1960 speech on the separation of church and state, during an interview with George Stephanopoulos on ABC’s This Week.
(Source: thinkprogress.org)
Actor Jason Alexander, famous for playing George Costanza on Seinfeld, responds to Mitt Romney’s continued invocation of the character he used to play.
h/t TPM
—
Eric Bolling, co-host of Fox News’ Fox & Friends, during a discussion with Rep. Maxine Waters(D-CA) about her use of tough rhetoric when discussing bankers. While his co-hosts attempted to rollback his comments, Bolling claimed to be joking and defended himself without apologizing to Rep. Waters.
See the video at ThinkProgress
Real Time: Bill Maher blasts Republicans for divisive tactics
Bill Maher Says GOP Is “Dividing America”: During last night’s ‘Real Time with Bill Maher’, the host lambasted Republicans for taking a divisive approach to politics. Saying the current crop of GOP candidates could save Americans time by simply disclosing “which parts of America they don’t hate”, Maher pointed out that members of the GOP regularly denigrate ”East Coast Elites and San Francisco Liberals” — among other groups — while simultaneously accusing the President of dividing the country. source
(Source: shortformblog)

