I too have noticed those simultaneous releases. Rumor has always been that leaks of those scripts were what sparked the clones among competing studios. My main observations are that King and Groenig shared close time with each other, and it's neat that they both went with the dome maguffin, and Simpsons did it better.
My syntax error lies with the adverb trailing the verb, methinks. It would have been better to say "immaculately programmed" or even better, "meticulously/precisely programmed." English is a hard language, even to writers of English.
I thought of "immaculate" as without flaw, error-less. But it should have preceded the verb, and I have no excuse for it being otherwise, except I was strapped for time.
For whatever reason, I saw this on my local news tonight. I LOL'd at the part- "When the cop came up to the car, he thought it was a bunch of kids goofing around. He put a flashlight on it. And he saw this bear turn around, in the driver's seat, and he turned around and looked at him. And when the cop saw that he said he never ran so fast in his life,"
I too have noticed those simultaneous releases. Rumor has always been that leaks of those scripts were what sparked the clones among competing studios.
My main observations are that King and Groenig shared close time with each other, and it's neat that they both went with the dome maguffin, and Simpsons did it better.
the answer to your question lies within your question.
"exactly" ... It's called a blade. maybe even an Exacto knife.
I thought of "immaculate" as without flaw, error-less. But it should have preceded the verb, and I have no excuse for it being otherwise, except I was strapped for time.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hh_shsRfXqk