Mikal
ACME
How much contact can VILE members have with family members? What if hypothetically someone had an adoptive brother who was a high ranking member of ACME? What would that situation be like? Asking for a friend...
I sense this friend of yours is a very intelligent man, Mikal. I suppose he would need to consider the amount of willpower it may take to keep certain things from his high-ranking-ACME-member-adoptive-brother. Wouldn't he?How much contact can VILE members have with family members? What if hypothetically someone had an adoptive brother who was a high ranking member of ACME? What would that situation be like? Asking for a friend...
I loved, and I suppose always will love, "At the Back of the North Wind" by George MacDonald. It's not folklore by many means, but was a preacher's way of retelling a story to help his readers cope with grief and loss. Particularly the loss of a young child.Any favorite folklore on your travels? (kinda a huge old story fan)
My favourite, perhaps for the amount of planning it took, was the theft of ACME Tower. It had to happen after ACME had completed their digital archives in full, as well as during a holiday where the tower would be empty.What was your favorite heist that you've pulled?
This is a good question. Aside from 'Cartoon logic,' as you say, there is a way for frequent travellers such as flight crews or pilots to control jet lag.I'm not exactly sure I can ask this since it isn't Canon anymore but I've been wondering for the longest time how come no one gets jet lag. ( yes I know cartoon logic LOL and if this is a stupid question I apologize Morgan)
Philosophical queen.No one. And everyone. What are we if we can't trust strangers at our moment of greatest need?
Please.I loved, and I suppose always will love, "At the Back of the North Wind" by George MacDonald. It's not folklore by many means, but was a preacher's way of retelling a story to help his readers cope with grief and loss. Particularly the loss of a young child.
I read it as a child, and it would occur to me much later that this story was truly meant for adults. It also opened up a topic of emotional stability, and how some of us, as humans, grow into adulthood without truly becoming emotionally mature.
I would be happy to share it, if you haven't yet read.
(I've only ever read one MacDonald story, "The Day Boy and the Night Girl," but I love it. I know he was a favorite of my favorite author, Madeleine L'Engle, and I've always meant to read more of him but never gotten around to it.)I loved, and I suppose always will love, "At the Back of the North Wind" by George MacDonald. It's not folklore by many means, but was a preacher's way of retelling a story to help his readers cope with grief and loss. Particularly the loss of a young child.
I read it as a child, and it would occur to me much later that this story was truly meant for adults. It also opened up a topic of emotional stability, and how some of us, as humans, grow into adulthood without truly becoming emotionally mature.
I would be happy to share it, if you haven't yet read.
Lucy said:I wake up and the first news headline I see is Mexican Navy Ship hits Brooklyn Bridge.Interesting!