Oookaaaay Avatar was amazing. Predictable plot line... I mean, EVERYTHING was predictable... But, um, that didn't even matter.

The parts where they were kind of plugged into the tree reminded me of various video games. When Jake was fighting that creature near the beginning and said, "Who's bad?" some guy in the theater, which was a sold out show, shouted "SHAMONE!" and everybody laughed for a while. That's why I like packed theaters. Stuff like that happens. My father doesn't understand, though. He was all, "It's 5:30 and the 10:45 showing's almost sold out already! THE HORROR!" But i was secretly happy. I hate going to empty theaters.
Such a good movie, though. After a while I forgot it was in 3D, which was obnoxious, but then I took off my glasses and imagined the blurriness wasn't there, and all I've got to say is, if you're going to see that movie, shell out the cash and see it in 3D, because that animation would not be a quarter as good if it were not in 3D.
Wozniak wrote:
oldest child bitterness is a big bitch and i think you should post a video of you moonwalking.
Yeah, but at least I got the awesome childhood on the 3000-acre farm with the woods and the fields and the creek, outside all day every day except when it was either too cold in the winter or too hot in the summer, in which cases we and the neighbor kids and the cousins spent the days playing Super Nintendo in twenty-minute shifts delegated by my mother. I was eleven when we left, so I got to spend my entire childhood there. One of the youngest kids was two, and the other wasn't even born yet. They get suburbs with tiny yards. I don't even think they know how to climb trees, which is just sad, and they'll never know what it is to build a fort out in the woods or a base in the middle of a cornfield, etc. etc. etc. At the end of the day, I'm not bitter at all.

It's just amusing that they get so many more privileges than I did at their ages.
Also, no videos of me ever, doing anything. They're always so embarrassing.

Haha.