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I am so sick of all these bs movies. Haven't been this irritated since boy bands

Please put the time and money into other things

They are killing it with the Marvel movies - most of them have been fantastic.
 
Busy opera season coming up this fall and spring.

Recommend it to all married folks in metro areas. It is actually fun. 3 hours go by fast with drinks in between.

Win those points, lads. @The Human Q-Tip @The Oi.

Remember, smoking jackets are black-tie alternative.
 
It's a great scene, which is why on one side I'm a bit bummed that it won't be as effective now in the film. Looks good though.

Better that than spoiling half the scares like a lot of trailers do. This one basically showed one scene and nothing else outside of some random shots. I like that for a horror movie. I also assume they cut a decent chunk out of that particular scene, so it will feel fresher in the theater.
 
Saw Detective Pikachu today with my daughter. It was pretty good for what it was. It was sort of like a PG Deadpool got stuck in Pikachu's body. I guess that's Ryan Reynolds' character in most of his movies. It was cool to see non-cartoon representations of all of the Pokemon too.

It was fun and she really liked it.
 
Physics type question:

If a man is fighting on top of a moving train on the last car, and he jumps really high...should he land on the train or should the train leave him behind, and he land on the tracks?

On the same note, if he jumps forward, should he land forward or end up where he started?
 
Physics type question:

If a man is fighting on top of a moving train on the last car, and he jumps really high...should he land on the train or should the train leave him behind, and he land on the tracks?

Behind the train. Unless he's in a vacuum, in which case he should come down in the same place.

On the same note, if he jumps forward, should he land forward or end up where he started?

Depends on how fast the train is moving and for how long he is on the air.
 
So should a guy running on a speeding train be gaining no ground?
 
So should a guy running on a speeding train be gaining no ground?

The whole thing is a question of wind resistance. When you are in contact with the train, you will obviously be moving the same speed as the train. If you jump, the train will continue moving ahead at the same speed, but you will instantly begin slowing from wind resistance.

A running guy is likely adding enough forward movement to overcome the slight (relative to the train) backward movement that comes from wind resistance when he is in the air while striding.
 

Rubber Rim Job Podcast Video

Episode 3-13: "Backup Bash Brothers"

Rubber Rim Job Podcast Spotify

Episode 3:11: "Clipping Bucks."
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