But isn't Donald the one that's getting angry all the time? Not exactly the best emotion to embody.
i think i mostly want to see what happens when this whole place breaks apart@Hopey: Everyone has a little good in them. Even Hitler was a little good. The man loved puppy dogs and Disney. Obviously that doesn't make him a good man, but it shows that even in that monster of a man, there was a little glimmer of human decency. And if the worst man who has ever lived could have a little speck of good in him, then I can guarantee that we can all be good.
That's the best I could do with Hitler. That's a really hard subject to Winger speech.
@Bri: The Winger speech never really makes much sense. It's just good enough to get the people through the moment, sense or no.
edited 31st Aug '14 8:12:40 PM by Kesagake
You're close... So very close! But no cigar!
ppppppppfeiufiofuiorjfadkfbnjkdflaosigjbkghuiafjkldjnbaghkdSometimes I feel weird for not being very into Disney shorts
Maybe it's because I grew up on Cartoon Network and Boomerang, and thus, WB, MGM and Hanna-Barbera
I prefer Warner Bros for its shorts and Disney for its feature length, but Disney can occasionally do some great shorts.
Jillian was her name
She was sweeter than aspartame
Her kisses reconfigured my DNA
And after that I never was the same
And I loved her even more
Than Marlon Brando loved soufflé
She was gorgeous, she was charming
Yeah, she was perfect in every way
Except she was always using the word "infer"
When she obviously meant "imply"
And I know some guys would put up with that kind of thing
But frankly, I can't imagine why
And I told her, I said
"Hey! Are we playing horseshoes, honey?
No, I don't think we are!
You're close! (Close!)
But no cigar!"
I do like WB's shorts, but MGM was slightly more to my liking because MGM's animation was of slightly, but noticeably, higher quality. The MGM of old had more money than God and it showed in their cartoons. They were pretty much the very definition of Hollywood glamour.
The only MGM stuff I watch on a regular basis is Tom & Jerry.
I re-watched some of Tex Avery's MGM shorts recently
They're great
Droopy's voice is a fun one to imitate
(I'm aware that Avery didn't direct all of his cartoons, but he did create the character)
edited 31st Aug '14 8:39:07 PM by AnonymousUser
Capital Cities/ABC, Inc.
I'VE BEEN WAITING FOR YOU, STARBUCKS
YOU KNOW THAT I RULE THE COFFEE INDUSTRY
IT'S FOOLISH TO COME AGAINST ME
NOW YOU WILL KNOW TRUE PAIN
this is unsafe
dead devotion. . . Helwlekqlkrpwbfnsjrmndndhxh
CURSE YOU, ALEX TRE8EK!
Stupid doomed timeline...I seem not to know about very many jobs. Most of the jobs I know are just the ones I've seen people actually doing, and I don't care for most of those.
I'm sure that there are lots of jobs in offices, with computers, but what do those people even do? Type in numbers?
Nah, that's intern work.
Then what even goes on in offices.
Depends on the position.
AS VAGUE AS SEEING AN OFFICE THROUGH FROSTED GLASS.
What about the kind of office that The Office is.
DO YOU CONSIDER STABILITY AND ORDER MORE IMPORTANT THAN DESIRE
DO YOU CONSIDER STABILITY AND ORDIRE MORE IMPORTANT THAN DESER
@Key: from what I can tell, absolutely nothing of value. Bits of paper get passed around, phones ring, people gather at water coolers, lives slip away in a grey haze of 9 to 5 mediocrity and important stuff like pay sheets for folk who actually work for a living get forgotten about.
edited 3rd Sep '14 4:59:28 AM by InverurieJones
'All he needs is for somebody to throw handgrenades at him for the rest of his life...'Jones, we can't all be awesome like you.
And being a monarch is my thing!
*hugs my prince*
“Check it out, Dipper! I successfully bezazzled my face!” – Mabel Pines