Still better than public schools!Cuacuani said:I sent my 3 year old there. She fell down a well and got eaten by a Balrog. Social Services are still investigating.Quaxar said:Oh yeah, Mines of Moria totally sounds like a child daycare.Appleshampoo said:If you hate British naming of Fantasy things I'd steer well clear of Lord of the rings if I were you. It's just FULL of that British cute naming you're on about.
To be fair, HP was written for 8 year olds. Ret-conning all the names because the audience has changed (although the new audience is made up of people who used to be part of the old) would make no sense at all.irrelevant83 said:Muggles is a word that forces me to accept the fact that I'm reading a book written for an 8 year old even
Agreed!Rylot said:Pistols at twenty paces at noon?
Please use spoilers if you have THAT MANY PICTURES.Michael K said:-snip-
Dull means boring and unfunny to me. According to Wiktionary it's "Adjective: Lacking interest or excitement.". I guess it was really just a disagreement on what the word meant, because to me "dull" definitely means bad when referring to a comedy, and almost always means bad with regards to other things too.SillyBear said:I'm English too.lunncal said:Dull is kind of the opposite of funny, and I don't think any of the shows I listed were seedy or dark either. Personally I think one of the few media-related things Britian is great at is comedy, but I may be a little biased considering I am English myself.
Dull means grey, introspective and subtle to me. It doesn't mean "bad".
Look at the UK Office in comparison to the US Office, then you'll know what I mean. One is colourful, loud, quirky, outward and celebratory and the other is the opposite. The cultures are different. Britain in generally is a very dreary place. And I don't mean that in a negative way, it's just different.
Im sorry, but freedom of speech? fuck you.Double A said:As an American, I can say "What the fuck?" You guys should work on improving Freedom of Speech.
lunncal said:Dull means boring and unfunny to me. According to Wiktionary it's "Adjective: Lacking interest or excitement.". I guess it was really just a disagreement on what the word meant, because to me "dull" definitely means bad when referring to a comedy, and almost always means bad with regards to other things too.SillyBear said:I'm English too.lunncal said:Dull is kind of the opposite of funny, and I don't think any of the shows I listed were seedy or dark either. Personally I think one of the few media-related things Britian is great at is comedy, but I may be a little biased considering I am English myself.
Dull means grey, introspective and subtle to me. It doesn't mean "bad".
Look at the UK Office in comparison to the US Office, then you'll know what I mean. One is colourful, loud, quirky, outward and celebratory and the other is the opposite. The cultures are different. Britain in generally is a very dreary place. And I don't mean that in a negative way, it's just different.
Still, there's no way you could argue Monty Python and Red Dwarf were dull, whether by your definition or mine.