I think the weirdest I’ve ever felt in an online discussion was the time I found myself out on a logical limb arguing that an Alicia line about how she preferred Ben in his rocky form over his human form proved that she was into rough trade. But I guess I never climbed off of that logical limb, because I still think it.
It’s also amusing because generally kids hate it when their parents get “mushy”. And apparently there’s a sound biological reason for that; romantic parents generally mean more siblings and competition for scarce family resources.
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Another keith said at 11:47 pm on July 16th, 2009:
This got me to thinking that, given his powers, “Mr. Fantastic” probably earns his name in the sack…
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zero democracy said at 10:16 am on July 17th, 2009:
Thank you for making me devote five seconds of thought to Ben Grimm’s orange rocky dong that probably chafes like crazy and leaves a residue of cheetoh dust where ever he sticks it.
It doesn’t help the that Franklin is drawn like a little person as opposed to a child. Creepy.
I think the weirdest I’ve ever felt in an online discussion was the time I found myself out on a logical limb arguing that an Alicia line about how she preferred Ben in his rocky form over his human form proved that she was into rough trade. But I guess I never climbed off of that logical limb, because I still think it.
It’s also amusing because generally kids hate it when their parents get “mushy”. And apparently there’s a sound biological reason for that; romantic parents generally mean more siblings and competition for scarce family resources.
This got me to thinking that, given his powers, “Mr. Fantastic” probably earns his name in the sack…
Thank you for making me devote five seconds of thought to Ben Grimm’s orange rocky dong that probably chafes like crazy and leaves a residue of cheetoh dust where ever he sticks it.
This got me to thinking that, given his powers, “Mr. Fantastic” probably earns his name in the sack…
I think Waid actually riffed on that in his run.