It’s the 10th anniversary of “Sozin’s Comet,” the epic finale of “Avatar: The Last Airbender” We spoke with series creators Michael DiMartino and Bryan Konietzko about how it all came together.
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Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

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It’s the 10th anniversary of “Sozin’s Comet,” the epic finale of “Avatar: The Last Airbender” We spoke with series creators Michael DiMartino and Bryan Konietzko about how it all came together.
Top 5 top 5 top 5.
The morning song. 1883. Book cover, detail.
Phantom Thread (2017) dir. Paul Thomas Anderson
I want shots of him eating his meal he ordered. Or driving his beautiful machine.
Michael Shannon on playing Nelson Van Alden in Boardwalk Empire
Shannon’s a gem.
“The main interest in life and work is to become someone else that you were not in the beginning. If you knew when you began a book what you would say at the end, do you think that you would have the courage to write it? What is true for writing and for romance is true also for life. The game is worthwhile insofar as we don’t know what will be the end.”
— Michael Foucault
“There is no such thing as a moral or an immoral book. Books are well written, or badly written. That is all.”
— Oscar Wilde, from the preface to The Picture of Dorian Gray
Martina Matencio
“No, not like that. A barren land, bare waste. Vulcanic lake, the dead sea: no fish, weedless, sunk deep in the earth. No wind would lift those waves, grey metal, poisonous foggy waters. Brimstone they called it raining down: the cities of the plain: Sodom, Gomorrah, Edom. All dead names. A dead sea in a dead land, grey and old. Old now. It bore the oldest, the first race. A bent hag crossed from Cassidy’s clutching a noggin bottle by the neck. The oldest people. Wandered far away over all the earth, captivity to captivity, multiplying, dying, being born everywhere. It lay there now. Now it could bear no more. Dead: an old woman’s: the grey sunken cunt of the world.”
— James Joyce, Ulysses
“One day many years ago a man walked along and stood in the sound of the ocean on a cold sunless shore and said, “We need a voice to call across the water, to warn ships; I’ll make one. I’ll make a voice like all of time and all of the fog that ever was; I’ll make a voice that is like an empty bed beside you all night long, and like an empty house when you open the door, and like trees in autumn with no leaves. A sound like the birds flying south, crying, and a sound like November wind and the sea on the hard, cold shore. I’ll make a sound that’s so alone that no one can miss it, that whoever hears it will weep in their souls, and hearths will seem warmer, and being inside will seem better to all who hear it in the distant towns. I’ll make me a sound and an apparatus and they’ll call it a Fog Horn and whoever hears it will know the sadness of eternity and the briefness of life.”
— Ray Bradbury, The Fog Horn
Just lovely.
“The infinite dead— in Nature’s chemistry distill’d, and shall be so forever, in every future grain of wheat and ear of corn, and every flower that grows, and every breath we draw.”
— Walt Whitman
“Go on, mock me! Laugh! That was not Mozart laughing, that was God. That was God laughing at me.”
— Antonio Salieri, Amadeus
Harry Dean Stanton by Kristine Larson
The great. Watch ‘Paris, Texas’ people. Watch it.