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mattingly

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  1. Like
    mattingly reacted to BigJackBrass in Darren Watts In Hospital   
    The final episode of Darren's podcast Explain This, Comics Guys!! has been released.
  2. Like
    mattingly reacted to Pariah in Jokes   
    Clint Eastwood, Leonardo DiCaprio, and Matthew McConaughey were talking one day when Clint said, "We should do a movie together. I'll direct."
     
    Leo agreed and said, "Fantastic. I'll act."
     
    Matthew also agreed and said, "I'll write, I'll write, I'll write."
  3. Thanks
    mattingly got a reaction from Pariah in What Have You Watched Recently?   
    Clue is amazing. I often watch it as a double feature with Murder by Death.
     
  4. Like
    mattingly got a reaction from slikmar in What Have You Watched Recently?   
    Clue is amazing. I often watch it as a double feature with Murder by Death.
     
  5. Like
    mattingly reacted to Ternaugh in What Have You Watched Recently?   
    Clue: Mystery/comedy based upon the board game. A fun watch. (Prime Video)
     
    Deathtrap: Based upon the Broadway play, with a failing playwright plotting the demise of a student to steal his play. Reminds me a bit of Sleuth (also with Michael Caine), and has parts that were probably an inspiration for Knives Out. A good watch. (DVD)
  6. Like
    mattingly reacted to Pariah in Jokes   
    Her: "I had a dream last night that I was at Target."
     
    Him: "Really? I had a dream last night that I was with three beautiful women."
     
    Her: "Ooh, was I one of them?"
     
    Him: "No, you were at Target."
  7. Like
    mattingly got a reaction from wcw43921 in What Have You Watched Recently?   
    Just finished rewatching The Mandalorian. So good.
  8. Like
    mattingly got a reaction from Starlord in What Have You Watched Recently?   
    Just finished rewatching The Mandalorian. So good.
  9. Haha
    mattingly got a reaction from slikmar in Funny Pics II: The Revenge   
  10. Like
    mattingly got a reaction from Ockham's Spoon in Funny Pics II: The Revenge   
  11. Like
    mattingly got a reaction from Starlord in Funny Pics II: The Revenge   
  12. Haha
    mattingly got a reaction from Old Man in Funny Pics II: The Revenge   
  13. Like
    mattingly got a reaction from Pariah in What Does Each Star Trek Series Do Best?   
    TOS: hope
    TAS: the first Trek to win an Emmy
    TNG: diversity
    DS9: depth
    VOY: women
    ENT: retro
    DIS: reinvent
    PIC: nostalgia
    LD: parody
    PRO: surprised me with how good it is for a Nickelodeon show
    SNW: made Star Trek fun again
     
     
  14. Like
    mattingly got a reaction from Pariah in Funny Pics II: The Revenge   
    The actual answer...
     
  15. Haha
    mattingly reacted to Pariah in Funny Pics II: The Revenge   
  16. Like
    mattingly reacted to BoloOfEarth in DC Movies- if at first you don't succeed...   
    My wife and I really enjoyed Lois and Clark: The New Adventures of Superman, to the point that one of my daughters recently commented, "Dean Cain is my Superman."
  17. Haha
    mattingly got a reaction from BoloOfEarth in Jokes   
  18. Haha
    mattingly got a reaction from wcw43921 in Jokes   
  19. Like
    mattingly got a reaction from Scott Ruggels in Darren Watts In Hospital   
    The first time I met Darren Watts, I was in the middle of a game at Gen Con. He gave me his DOJ business card and wanted to talk to me after. He respected my work on fanzines such as Haymaker, Rogues Gallery, and The Clobberin' Times. He and Steven S. Long later offered me a job writing and editing at Hero Games. The timing wasn't right for me, sadly, but I did get to manage/edit the in-house magazine Digital Hero for its full run. 
     
    We always had a blast together, hanging out at the booth, running or playing games together, or otherwise just shooting the breeze. I usually acted as the GM Assistant in Darren's "Build & Brawl" Champions games, in which players started with a blank character sheet and dozens of books spread around the table, with Darren and I as rules experts to help players get going. I was surprised at how many first-timers we'd get, and they'd always come up with great ideas:
    a first-time player made a superhero who would push her opponents into a different dimension with no way back the planet Earth, who apparently had a secret ID, and would occasionally fight other superbeings a brain in a jar who wore a domino mask to protect his secret identity as another brain in a different jar  
    I helped run the special Champions 30th anniversary game along with Rod Currie, in which Foxbat had somehow changed the timeline and made himself an honest-to-gosh superhero, admired by millions (Foxbat and His Amazing Friends). Darren, Steven, and Jason Walters were the VIP players, along with several lucky other gamers, who went back in time to prevent him from kidnapping Steve Peterson, George MacDonald, Raymond Greer, and Bruce Harlick and forcing them to change his character origin in the original source material.
     
    For the past three years, I've loved listening to his Explain This, Comics Guys podcast, where he'd take us all on a behind-the-scenes tour of the early days of the comic book industry. Every episode I'd learn a dozen things that I didn't know, despite being a lifelong nerd myself. 
     
    Darren's passing will leave a hole in the industry and in my circle of friends. Darren was a hero.
     
  20. Like
    mattingly got a reaction from Christougher in Darren Watts In Hospital   
    The first time I met Darren Watts, I was in the middle of a game at Gen Con. He gave me his DOJ business card and wanted to talk to me after. He respected my work on fanzines such as Haymaker, Rogues Gallery, and The Clobberin' Times. He and Steven S. Long later offered me a job writing and editing at Hero Games. The timing wasn't right for me, sadly, but I did get to manage/edit the in-house magazine Digital Hero for its full run. 
     
    We always had a blast together, hanging out at the booth, running or playing games together, or otherwise just shooting the breeze. I usually acted as the GM Assistant in Darren's "Build & Brawl" Champions games, in which players started with a blank character sheet and dozens of books spread around the table, with Darren and I as rules experts to help players get going. I was surprised at how many first-timers we'd get, and they'd always come up with great ideas:
    a first-time player made a superhero who would push her opponents into a different dimension with no way back the planet Earth, who apparently had a secret ID, and would occasionally fight other superbeings a brain in a jar who wore a domino mask to protect his secret identity as another brain in a different jar  
    I helped run the special Champions 30th anniversary game along with Rod Currie, in which Foxbat had somehow changed the timeline and made himself an honest-to-gosh superhero, admired by millions (Foxbat and His Amazing Friends). Darren, Steven, and Jason Walters were the VIP players, along with several lucky other gamers, who went back in time to prevent him from kidnapping Steve Peterson, George MacDonald, Raymond Greer, and Bruce Harlick and forcing them to change his character origin in the original source material.
     
    For the past three years, I've loved listening to his Explain This, Comics Guys podcast, where he'd take us all on a behind-the-scenes tour of the early days of the comic book industry. Every episode I'd learn a dozen things that I didn't know, despite being a lifelong nerd myself. 
     
    Darren's passing will leave a hole in the industry and in my circle of friends. Darren was a hero.
     
  21. Like
    mattingly got a reaction from rravenwood in Darren Watts In Hospital   
    The first time I met Darren Watts, I was in the middle of a game at Gen Con. He gave me his DOJ business card and wanted to talk to me after. He respected my work on fanzines such as Haymaker, Rogues Gallery, and The Clobberin' Times. He and Steven S. Long later offered me a job writing and editing at Hero Games. The timing wasn't right for me, sadly, but I did get to manage/edit the in-house magazine Digital Hero for its full run. 
     
    We always had a blast together, hanging out at the booth, running or playing games together, or otherwise just shooting the breeze. I usually acted as the GM Assistant in Darren's "Build & Brawl" Champions games, in which players started with a blank character sheet and dozens of books spread around the table, with Darren and I as rules experts to help players get going. I was surprised at how many first-timers we'd get, and they'd always come up with great ideas:
    a first-time player made a superhero who would push her opponents into a different dimension with no way back the planet Earth, who apparently had a secret ID, and would occasionally fight other superbeings a brain in a jar who wore a domino mask to protect his secret identity as another brain in a different jar  
    I helped run the special Champions 30th anniversary game along with Rod Currie, in which Foxbat had somehow changed the timeline and made himself an honest-to-gosh superhero, admired by millions (Foxbat and His Amazing Friends). Darren, Steven, and Jason Walters were the VIP players, along with several lucky other gamers, who went back in time to prevent him from kidnapping Steve Peterson, George MacDonald, Raymond Greer, and Bruce Harlick and forcing them to change his character origin in the original source material.
     
    For the past three years, I've loved listening to his Explain This, Comics Guys podcast, where he'd take us all on a behind-the-scenes tour of the early days of the comic book industry. Every episode I'd learn a dozen things that I didn't know, despite being a lifelong nerd myself. 
     
    Darren's passing will leave a hole in the industry and in my circle of friends. Darren was a hero.
     
  22. Like
    mattingly got a reaction from Lawnmower Boy in Darren Watts In Hospital   
    The first time I met Darren Watts, I was in the middle of a game at Gen Con. He gave me his DOJ business card and wanted to talk to me after. He respected my work on fanzines such as Haymaker, Rogues Gallery, and The Clobberin' Times. He and Steven S. Long later offered me a job writing and editing at Hero Games. The timing wasn't right for me, sadly, but I did get to manage/edit the in-house magazine Digital Hero for its full run. 
     
    We always had a blast together, hanging out at the booth, running or playing games together, or otherwise just shooting the breeze. I usually acted as the GM Assistant in Darren's "Build & Brawl" Champions games, in which players started with a blank character sheet and dozens of books spread around the table, with Darren and I as rules experts to help players get going. I was surprised at how many first-timers we'd get, and they'd always come up with great ideas:
    a first-time player made a superhero who would push her opponents into a different dimension with no way back the planet Earth, who apparently had a secret ID, and would occasionally fight other superbeings a brain in a jar who wore a domino mask to protect his secret identity as another brain in a different jar  
    I helped run the special Champions 30th anniversary game along with Rod Currie, in which Foxbat had somehow changed the timeline and made himself an honest-to-gosh superhero, admired by millions (Foxbat and His Amazing Friends). Darren, Steven, and Jason Walters were the VIP players, along with several lucky other gamers, who went back in time to prevent him from kidnapping Steve Peterson, George MacDonald, Raymond Greer, and Bruce Harlick and forcing them to change his character origin in the original source material.
     
    For the past three years, I've loved listening to his Explain This, Comics Guys podcast, where he'd take us all on a behind-the-scenes tour of the early days of the comic book industry. Every episode I'd learn a dozen things that I didn't know, despite being a lifelong nerd myself. 
     
    Darren's passing will leave a hole in the industry and in my circle of friends. Darren was a hero.
     
  23. Like
    mattingly got a reaction from MrAgdesh in Darren Watts In Hospital   
    The first time I met Darren Watts, I was in the middle of a game at Gen Con. He gave me his DOJ business card and wanted to talk to me after. He respected my work on fanzines such as Haymaker, Rogues Gallery, and The Clobberin' Times. He and Steven S. Long later offered me a job writing and editing at Hero Games. The timing wasn't right for me, sadly, but I did get to manage/edit the in-house magazine Digital Hero for its full run. 
     
    We always had a blast together, hanging out at the booth, running or playing games together, or otherwise just shooting the breeze. I usually acted as the GM Assistant in Darren's "Build & Brawl" Champions games, in which players started with a blank character sheet and dozens of books spread around the table, with Darren and I as rules experts to help players get going. I was surprised at how many first-timers we'd get, and they'd always come up with great ideas:
    a first-time player made a superhero who would push her opponents into a different dimension with no way back the planet Earth, who apparently had a secret ID, and would occasionally fight other superbeings a brain in a jar who wore a domino mask to protect his secret identity as another brain in a different jar  
    I helped run the special Champions 30th anniversary game along with Rod Currie, in which Foxbat had somehow changed the timeline and made himself an honest-to-gosh superhero, admired by millions (Foxbat and His Amazing Friends). Darren, Steven, and Jason Walters were the VIP players, along with several lucky other gamers, who went back in time to prevent him from kidnapping Steve Peterson, George MacDonald, Raymond Greer, and Bruce Harlick and forcing them to change his character origin in the original source material.
     
    For the past three years, I've loved listening to his Explain This, Comics Guys podcast, where he'd take us all on a behind-the-scenes tour of the early days of the comic book industry. Every episode I'd learn a dozen things that I didn't know, despite being a lifelong nerd myself. 
     
    Darren's passing will leave a hole in the industry and in my circle of friends. Darren was a hero.
     
  24. Haha
    mattingly got a reaction from Duke Bushido in Funny Pics II: The Revenge   
  25. Like
    mattingly got a reaction from Chris Goodwin in Darren Watts In Hospital   
    The first time I met Darren Watts, I was in the middle of a game at Gen Con. He gave me his DOJ business card and wanted to talk to me after. He respected my work on fanzines such as Haymaker, Rogues Gallery, and The Clobberin' Times. He and Steven S. Long later offered me a job writing and editing at Hero Games. The timing wasn't right for me, sadly, but I did get to manage/edit the in-house magazine Digital Hero for its full run. 
     
    We always had a blast together, hanging out at the booth, running or playing games together, or otherwise just shooting the breeze. I usually acted as the GM Assistant in Darren's "Build & Brawl" Champions games, in which players started with a blank character sheet and dozens of books spread around the table, with Darren and I as rules experts to help players get going. I was surprised at how many first-timers we'd get, and they'd always come up with great ideas:
    a first-time player made a superhero who would push her opponents into a different dimension with no way back the planet Earth, who apparently had a secret ID, and would occasionally fight other superbeings a brain in a jar who wore a domino mask to protect his secret identity as another brain in a different jar  
    I helped run the special Champions 30th anniversary game along with Rod Currie, in which Foxbat had somehow changed the timeline and made himself an honest-to-gosh superhero, admired by millions (Foxbat and His Amazing Friends). Darren, Steven, and Jason Walters were the VIP players, along with several lucky other gamers, who went back in time to prevent him from kidnapping Steve Peterson, George MacDonald, Raymond Greer, and Bruce Harlick and forcing them to change his character origin in the original source material.
     
    For the past three years, I've loved listening to his Explain This, Comics Guys podcast, where he'd take us all on a behind-the-scenes tour of the early days of the comic book industry. Every episode I'd learn a dozen things that I didn't know, despite being a lifelong nerd myself. 
     
    Darren's passing will leave a hole in the industry and in my circle of friends. Darren was a hero.
     
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