Sentences with phrase «n't reading comic»

Isn't this the same as making sure, for example, that kids aren't reading comic books during history class?
@Adelina American atheists have plenty of things to read, we just don't read comic books (like your bible).
I didn't read comics growing up but I did know some of the origins of some of the characters before the movies came out.
I don't have much say having not read the comics, but Kick - Ass's story is cut short way too far.
«But you didn't read the comics, so you just don't get it,» is what I'll hear from fans / supporters.
I haven't read the comic strip, but from the trailers I take it this movie is about a bisexual Game Stop employee trying to get signed to his girlfriend's record label or something... looks interesting...
If you don't read comic books, just ignore me and know what I mean is Ponsoldt is now a go - to director for cinema.)
I don't read comic books and neither does Case, but he watches cartoons some.
Plus, the title Annihilation would resonate with casual MCU fans who don't read the comics, as the word transcends both mediums; thus, it would appeal to a broader audience, not just comic book fans.
I don't read comic books — except for those couple of times where I sat adjacent to the graphic novel section in Borders.
This writer hasn't read the comic, but the funny Faison seems like a good fit for the goofy world of the movie.
While those who don't read comics were trying to convince you that they were big game scoop hunters who bagged a «World War Hulk» elephant for Avengers 3, everyone else was starting to get hyped for seeing the Infinity Gauntlet saga on the big screen.
If you don't read comic books, just ignore me and...
Many bloggers who don't read comic books blasted Marvel for including Strange's «manservant» Wong in the movie, but these people (since they don't read comics, only Wikipedia) don't know that in recent years Wong has become someone who can kick ass and hold his own right alongside Strange.
I'm not going to get into what mutants have appeared in the series, or even the history — because I haven't read the comics and summarizing it would take forever — so there's Wikipedia for that.
If you haven't read the comics, you'll only keep assuming what's going to happen next.
The Black Order — Thanos» evil henchpeople — aren't very well known to MCU fans who haven't read the comics.
By way of introduction to this geek article, I should admit that I am not really a geek in the «Big Bang Theory» sense: I don't read comics, play computer games, have any Doctor Who models, or like Star Trek / Wars.
However, the real push in the industry needs to be to figure out how to get people that aren't reading comics (men and women alike) into comic stories (or digital stores... wherever comics are sold).
Why not read the comics that inspired the movie?
Those of us who used to read comics could get right into the movies, but we don't read the comics, because they don't have the attraction of the Marvel universe we knew.
The Walking Dead is a phenomenally popular comic, but it's also one you would expect to do a bit better in digital than in print, because the television show has a much larger audience than the comic, and most people who don't read comics regularly don't even know that comic shops exist, much less how to find one.
Hey, it's cool that you didn't read comics growing up.
I haven't read a comic book on an ereader, except once and I gave up on it... The Kindle Readers are very difficult to work with... 6 ″ is way too small a screen, plus the delay to zoom in to read the dang thing just takes too much effort.
For example, my father probably hasn't read a comic since 1967.
It beats not reading comics at all, I guess, but I wouldn't choose it.
In the direct market, sure, that may be true, but Scholastic has printed ten million copies of Jeff Smith's Bone, a comic for the children who do not read comics, since 2005.
The app faces a similar problem to traditional comic - book stores: Consumers who don't read comics on a regular basis — but who might be interested in a specific franchise property, like Doctor Who, or a comic written by an author they enjoy, like Anne Rice — are less likely to know about their availability, since they're no more likely to download the comics apps than they are to visit a comic - book store.
The real challenge of digital comics is to get people who aren't reading comics normally to take a look and find something they want to read.
And while I hadn't read any comics through the service, as a customer, I would have at least expected to be notified of that significant of a change to its catalog.
I think Injustice 2 captures perfectly what a clash between major DC characters would look like without having to explain everything to those who haven't read the comics.
• Unenthusiastic voice acting • Poor writing quality / Lack of depth • Missed opportunity with the setting • Vague cutscenes • Unwelcoming for those who haven't read the comics • Nikolai is not very good at close combat
I don't read comic books.

Not exact matches

My mother would probably have been mortified to learn that I was doing this on Saturday afternoons — she probably figured I got my comics from the corner store — but I'll be damned if I didn't learn how to read cars and traffic lights at an early age, a skill that has paid dividends ever since I got behind the wheel.
Not only do I credit comic books with improving my reading comprehension skills (having pictures explain the words is a great educational trick), they also made me into what I consider to be a fairly decent driver.
«Everybody I would talk to knows the characters and read comics as kids, and we just didn't,» Bettany said.
Don't get me started on comic books: Having survived the zine revolution, the Secret Wars, and the Crisis on Infinite Earths, what's a fanboy approaching middle age supposed to read?
«But don't forget that I also read a lot of comic books as I was growing up, and I think that might have influenced me just as much.
OK, I checked out the comic, and then read the headline, and obviously missed the play on words, but then I got it, and kept reading, then I went back to the comic and looked at it again, and thought that the point was ok, but it wasn't really funny... then I looked a little south and laughed out loud.
Have you ever read a Comic Book where the «hero» does not prevail?
It is infinitely comic that a man, moved unto tears, so much moved that not only tears but sweat trickle from him, can sit and read, or hear, representations of self - denial, of the nobility of sacrificing one's life for the truth — and then the next instant — one, two, three, slap - dash, almost with the tears still in his eyes — is in full swing, in the sweat of his brow, with all his might and main, helping falsehood to conquer.
Their pietism, which I confused with Lutheranism, early made me restive, not least because of my precocious reading of Britannica articles on evolution and Gibbon's Decline and Fall (my father's library was short on comic books).
It does not read like a comic book.
Finally, anyone who reads such publications needs to take everything that is printed with a liberal helping of salt, remember as The Jam so eloquently put it, the News of the World is «It's just a comic, not much more»
When I'm not working I'm watching obscure film or reading comic books, sometimes I listen to things too.
When not busy reading horror comic books, Jim Duffalo (4 - 2, 2.88) and Don Larsen (7 - 7, 3.05) will pitch in relief.
I never ventured into other types of comics as they seemed to have tiny writing which looked cramped, yeah not very sophisticated reason to not read them, but give me a break, I was young and did not need deep reasons to like or not like something.
Comic books, now generally known as graphic novels, have increasingly been finding their way into classrooms and school libraries as teachers search for tools to not only help their students learn how to read, but to tap into the vivid imagination that is the hallmark of childhood and turn their students onto a lifelong love of reading.
Studies show that it doesn't matter whether children are reading books about rockets or comic books; the key is that their interest is captured and that they like to read.
There is no reason similar cases could not be won for any number of political or social sympathies — from supporting fox hunting to reading Batman comics.
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