Sexy Fandom with Molly Case

Laurel K. Hamilton Incubus Dreams

— Molly Case on November 30th, 2004 @ 4:50 am Books

Although I like her fae books better than her vampy ones, there is no denying that Laurell K. Hamilton knows her way around a hot sex scene. I just ordered this and here is what her publisher had to say about her newest hardcover Incubus Dreams.

No one is as good at stripping bare the dark desires of the inhuman soul as Laurell K. Hamilton, something she has proven time after time in her New York Times bestselling Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter novels. Now, in Incubus Dreams, Anita’s life is more complicated than ever, as she is caught between her obligations to the living and the undead.

A vampire serial killer who preys on strippers is on the loose. Called in to consult on the case, Anita fears her judgment may be clouded by a conflict of interest. For she is, after all, the consort of Jean-Claude, the ever-intoxicating Master Vampire of the City. Surrounded by suspicion, overwhelmed by her attempts to control the primal lusts that continue to wrack her as a result of her passionate contacts with vampires, werewolves, and the shapeshifter Micah, Anita does something unprecedented: She calls for help.

New Friends Button for Linking Topsites

— Molly Case on November 30th, 2004 @ 4:15 am About Us

I even got a new button made to have on this topsites listing. This size of button is apparently called “friends” which I think is kind of cute.

I Love the Devilish Topsites

— Molly Case on November 30th, 2004 @ 4:13 am Web Sites

I’m still learning about how to get visitors to my web site and not just talk about what I find interesting on other web sites. I mentioned the darling I Love the Devil site the other day. One of the features of that site is a topsites which can track how many hits Sexy Fandom sends to it and then ranks Sexy Fandom higher in its list of sites, so that hopefully more people will see the Sexy Fandom button and click over to this site. So, if you like my site, it would be helpful if you could click this link for me today. Thanks.

I Love The Devil

— Molly Case on November 29th, 2004 @ 4:35 am General Fandom, Web Sites

While I am in the mode of mentioning how sexy I find the devilish cuties of Blue Blood’s BarelyEvil.com, it bears mentioning that ilovethedevil.com is one hell of a fun site. Model profiles make up the bulk of this site and they’ve clearly looked far and wide to bring you tons of self-indulgant women who want you to look at them naked. I do not show any nudity on SexyFandom and it looks like I Love the Devil features some but keeps it to a minimum. Although they do provide plenty of naughty links. They do not have the biggest archive of feature articles, but the ones they have are very well-written and insightful.

Cafe Flesh 2

— Molly Case on November 28th, 2004 @ 4:23 am Costuming, Movies

So I guess everything successful has to have a sequel. The porn cult classic Cafe Flesh is no exception. Apparently, in the area of adult video at least, Antonio Passolini is a respected director and was considered a good pick to do this franchise justice. Nonetheless, word is that some folks were kind of bent out of shape about VCA doing a sequel to their masterpiece. I haven’t personally seen Cafe Flesh #2 yet, but the box cover looks curiousity-inducing and some of the stills I have seen around the net look well-costumed and creative. If anyone happens to pick this up on VHS or DVD, please drop me an email and let me know what you think of it.

Ogre Porn Hot Shrex Big Love

— Molly Case on November 27th, 2004 @ 8:12 am Web Sites

Sometimes it is hard to tell when the internet is kidding and when it is not. In this case, it is just big and slutty. And green. Yes, folks, it is OgrePorn.com for your viewing pleasure. This is sixteen kinds of wrong, but I can’t stop looking at it. Some people just lose control with access to Photoshop.

Sexy Trek Gallery of the Week

— Molly Case on November 26th, 2004 @ 7:32 pm Costuming, Web Sites

Okay, I admit I’ve fantasized about rough Klingon mating habits on more than one occasion, but I kind of wanted this Sexy Trek Klingon to have better makeup and have it in more places. That said, it is still kind of fun to imagine roll-playing some kinky fun in a hotel storeroom at a con.

Suicide Girls Are Red Shirts

— Molly Case on November 26th, 2004 @ 4:37 am Web Sites

I’m excited to be having mainstream impact just a few months into doing this blog. I’m tickled pink that a girl named Edea just appeared on Suicide Girls in a Star Trek uniform. I admit that the same girl has a set which they call pothead where she appears to be, err, smoking pot and lists her fantasy as “To smoke up with Voltaire” although she does not specify whether she means Voltaire the philosopher or the singer or the model. She also says the five items she can not live without are bong, green stuff, vibrator. I’m only counting three there, but she also lists The Matrix and Futurama as two of her favorite things and that is just plain goodness, so who is to quibble. Wouldn’t it be weird if my little hobby blog got to be really huge and influential. So far I am honestly a little overwhelmed. It is funny that Fleshbot mentioned the Star Trek influence in my little site less than two weeks ago and it seems to have created this huge wave of Star Trekness in the porn world. A lot of other sites have mentioned specifically the Star Trek parts of Sexy Fandom since Fleshbot did. So now where is my all long-haired guys in plate armor all the time site? That is the influence I really want to have. For those less dorky than I am, I feel the need to mention that Edea is a character from Final Fantasy VIII and is the subject of frequent cosplay mischief.

Thanksgiving

— Molly Case on November 25th, 2004 @ 6:18 am Real Life

I’ve been bothered about the Thanksgiving holiday ever since I found out about the whole thing with the plague blankets. I do love eating a lot though and this year the turkey isn’t the only thing getting stuffed, if you know what I mean.

Ondine is Devilish

— Molly Case on November 25th, 2004 @ 4:12 am Costuming, Web Sites

Ah, those devil girls from Blue Blood’s BarelyEvil.com make me want to do bad things. Here is a sample gallery for SexyFandom readers of Ondine bathing in a bathtub I like even better than her sexy look.

Riverbed Ruckus

— Molly Case on November 24th, 2004 @ 9:17 am Costuming, Web Sites

She is spearfishing in chainmail until he shows up with no pants ready to show her a how a girl could loosen up and have a lot of fun in a rocky riverbed.

Son of Filk

— Molly Case on November 23rd, 2004 @ 1:01 am General Fandom, Real Life

It looks like others have tried to explain what filking is and come up short as well. Their explanations waffle between apocrypha and despair.

Filk is a form of music created from within fandom, and performed generally late at night at science fiction conventions.

Originally “filk music” was a typo for folk music in a never-published essay on the influence of Science Fiction and Fantasy on folk music. Its first known deliberate use was by Karen Kruse Anderson in Die Zeitschrift für Vollstandigen Unsinn (The Journal for Utter Nonsense) #774 (June 1953), for a song written by the well known science fiction author Poul Anderson.

Fandom being what it was (and is), the term was adopted for the songs, and musical parodies enjoyed by SF conventioneers. Practitioners are known as filkers.

The phrase ’science fiction themed parody folk music’ fails to capture the full range of filk music, not least because it stretches all the way from writing “funny” (or very deep) words to established or original melodies, through writing new (and witty) words to a tune another filker has created, to all-out Filk Opera - Gilbert and Sullivan have been filked a few times, as has Cats.

However, the word “filk” has also been applied to music with an original score written about a science fiction or fantasy theme.

Filk can even tell an original story such as the “Before the Dawn” song cycle.

Filk is still sung in late night filk circles at Science Fiction conventions but there are also dedicated Filk conventions each year in the US, Canada, UK and Germany. One of these conventions, the Ohio Valley Filk Fest (OVFF), presents the Pegasus Award annually for excellence in filk.

A broad, inclusive definition, lists filk as “A form of music not identified by its harmonic, rhythmic, rhyming, cultural, or similarly traditional determining qualities. It defies classification by regional origin or harmonic, melodic, or rhythmic traits; it is -rather- a form of music based upon its lyrical content. Regardless of musical style, filk songs are those that are about or inspired by science fiction, fantasy, horror, science, and/or subjects of interest to fans of speculative fiction.” Given the last clause in this definition, a filk song can be about anything. (via Wikipedia)

Fetus de Milo in Rubber Catsuit is the Future

— Molly Case on November 22nd, 2004 @ 12:50 am Costuming, Web Sites

This sample gallery of Fetus de Milo sporting a full body-covering black rubber catsuit has a very cyberpunk feel to me. Her facial piercings are so artfully arranged that she truly owns her body in a posthuman way and her second latex skin is certainly nothing our cave-dwelling ancestors would have worn.

Topsites Animated Button

— Molly Case on November 21st, 2004 @ 10:32 pm About Us

I’m not sure if it is any good, but I made an animated button myself based on one of the banner designs my friend made for me. I was going to join this fantasy topsites, but, after I went through all the trouble to try to teach myself how to make a button, I found out that the topsites in question autocensors the word sex, so no site called sexy anything was going to get approved. I couldn’t even apply. The funny thing is that I don’t even show any nudity, not even topless drawings, and the topsites I was applying too had almost all naked buttons on it. Just not the word sex I guess.

Button #1

If anyone knows any good science fiction or fantasy topsites for me to check out, please email me and give me a tip about them. Sexy horror is nice too, but please don’t send me anything too brutal. I don’t have the stomach for the really hardcore stuff with people getting eviscerated in slo-mo and everything.

Spooky Links Topsites

— Molly Case on November 21st, 2004 @ 11:39 am General Fandom, Web Sites

SpookyLinks

I like Spooky Links for actually bothering to have a science fiction/fantasy section, but I’m going to ask you all a favor today. Please click on the graphic or click here to vote for SexyFandom on SpookyLinks because it would be really nice if SexyFandom got a higher ranking there. Thanks for your help. And you might find some very cool niche sites while you are there.

Filking Slam Dance

— Molly Case on November 20th, 2004 @ 12:53 am General Fandom, Real Life

It has always struck me that fandom and various musical subcultures have a lot in common. They are both refuges for the socially disenfranchised seeking meaning or a home or some other elusive intangible. Of course, the practice of filking makes this seem implausible. I admit I have participated in this awful activity on many occasions. I was young and foolish and and at cons far from home. And potentially intoxicated. Filking is basically a special fannish form of really really bad music than can be performed by individuals or groups.

Nonetheless, it seems to me that the punk or goth or emo (is that even a word?) or rocker of any stripe is not psychologically that far from the areas of fandom I am more comfortable in, books, movies, and the formulaic TV shows I write for.

Sexy Trek Gallery of the Week

— Molly Case on November 19th, 2004 @ 7:27 pm Costuming, Web Sites

As these sample pictures demonstrate, any good English teacher will tell you that if you introduce a laser pistol in the first act, it has to go off by the third act.

Mead Drinking Leads to Sex

— Molly Case on November 18th, 2004 @ 9:11 am Costuming, Web Sites

It starts off with a little mead drinking and next thing you know the two couples pictures in this sample gallery are all buck naked and doing it on the floor. This is why you should be suspicious if a friend tells you he is learning how to brew mead.

Erotic BPM Ray Gun Party

— Molly Case on November 17th, 2004 @ 11:46 am Costuming, Gadgets, Web Sites

There is something about the raver subculture which always struck me as very science fiction, like a bright spot in some future dystopia not yet here more than in a Jeff Noon Vurt sort of way. Formerly raverporn, EroticBMP is a site which bills itself as having more naked ravers than you can shake a glowstick at. The really fun thing here is the outfits. Ravers do not have some of the same self-serious constraints of certain other subcultures and so they are totally down for parading around in implausible wigs and silver bikinis and waving ray guns around. Gotta love it.

Playing Dungeons & Dragons Good for Your Offspring

— Molly Case on November 17th, 2004 @ 8:59 am Costuming, Real Life

The Weekly World News has done it again. Noted Spanish scientists have done an experiment which proves roleplaying can improve your kids’ career chances. They had couples wear costumes while trying to conceive and then checked in eighteen years later to see if playing Little Red Riding Hood and the Horny Construction Worker really did have an impact on the blastula.

Sinfest is the Devil

— Molly Case on November 16th, 2004 @ 8:45 am Books, Web Sites

Sinfest is one of the most fun strips in the Keenspot stable. It is a mature audiences strip, but the humor is subtle, rather than smack-you-in-the-head lewd. In one of the earliest strips, the devil is in a little booth which pays homage to the ones Lucy used to dispense psychiatric assitance from in Peanuts. Slick, the sort of everyman character gives the devil a list of everything he wants in return for his soul. The devil asks him if one of the items on the list says “supermodel sandy.” Slick responds, “sandwich. supermodel sandwich.” As you all know, I have a weak spot for cutesy devils, so the devil in Sin Fest gets my vote too. The comic recently addressed political issues fairly regularly, but from the sociological analysis of how humorously people were responding to the electoral process in America this election. When Slick is running for office, an angel character comes up to him and says, “Fear me. I have a huge constituency.” Of course, other candidates are fielded from the Sith and Nazgul parties and vampires as the real enemy are considered as a major campaign issue. Heck, just check out the site. Sinfest has an archive of comics dating from 2000, so you can pretty much kiss goodbye anything you had planned to get done today.

How to Tell if Your Prostitute is an Extraterrestrial

— Molly Case on November 16th, 2004 @ 8:23 am Real Life

You have to love the Weekly World News and not just for Batboy. They have just graciously provided us all with an expert list of ten warning signs that the prostitute you are about to pick up is an alien. Not interested in hookers? Then you can just skip down to the recent entries about mead and absinthe. Trust me, you will need to comprehend the definition of mead soon enough.

At any rate, apparently alien trollops tend to use outdated slang, can be absurdly movie star attractive, make you think they are better in bed than they are, and refuse to let you spank them. Probably not even for a big tip. The implication is that perhaps they are jumpy that we may want revenge for all the anal probing they have been doing to our people. (via Screenhead)

What is Absinthe?

— Molly Case on November 16th, 2004 @ 12:23 am Real Life

Someone emailed me to ask whether mead was what got Edgar Allan Poe and Vincent Van Gogh so loopy and so creative. You are confusing mead with absinthe, gentle reader. Mead merely tastes sort of bad but sort of musky, kind of like some oral sex. Absinthe, on the other hand, gives you the expectation of brilliance and innovation to emanate from all your pores when really it just gets you amazingly plastered.

Absinthe (from the French) is an alcohol liqueur derived from herbs including the flowers and leaves of wormwood, Artemisia absinthium.

Absinthe is known for its popularity in France—and especially its romantic associations with Parisian artists and writers—in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, until its prohibition in 1915. The most popular brand of absinthe known to the world was Pernod Fils.

Absinthe usually has a pale-green color (giving it its nick name “The Green Fairy”) and tastes much like an anise-flavored liqueur, but with a more subtle flavor due to the many herbs used, and light bitter undertones. In addition to wormwood, it contains anise (often partially substituted with star anise), Florence fennel, hyssop, melissa, and Roman wormwood (Artemisia pontica). Various recipes also include angelica root, sweet flag, dittany leaves, coriander, and other mountain herbs.

A simple maceration of wormwood without distillation produces an extremely bitter drink, due to the presence of the water-soluble absinthine, one of the most bitter substances known. Authentic recipes call for distillation after the primary maceration and before the secondary or “colouring” maceration. The distillation of wormwood, anise, and florence fennel first produces a colorless “alcoholate”, and to this the well-known green color of the beverage is imparted by steeping with the leaves of roman wormwood, hyssop, and melissa.

Inferior varieties are made by means of essences or oils cold-mixed in alcohol, the distillation process being omitted.

The alcohol content is extremely high (45%-90%), given the low solubility of many of the herbal components in alcohol. It is usually not drunk “straight”, but consumed after a fairly elaborate ritual in which an absinthe spoon with a sugar cube is placed over a glass, and water is poured over the sugar until the drink is diluted 3:1 to 5:1. During that ritual, the components that are not soluble in water come out of solution and cloud the drink; that milky opalescence has always been called the “louche”.

Historically, there were four varieties of absinthe: ordinaire, demi-fine, fine, and supérieures or Swiss, the latter of which was of a higher alcoholic strength than the former. It can be colored green (which is done to add flavors) or left clear. The best absinthes contain 65 to 75% alcohol. It is said to improve very materially by storage. It is known that in the 19th century absinthe, like much food and drink of the time, was occasionally adulterated by profiteers with copper, zinc, indigo, or other dye-stuffs to impart the green color, but this was never done by the best distilleries.

It was thought that excessive absinthe-drinking led to effects which were specifically worse than those associated with over-indulgence in other forms of alcohol — which is bound to have been true for some of the less scrupulously adulterated products –, creating the condition absinthisme. Undistilled wormwood essential oil contains a substance called thujone, which is an epileptic in extremely high doses, and the supposed ill effects of the drink were blamed on that substance in 19th century studies.

More recent studies have shown that very little of the thujone present in absinthe actually makes it into a properly distilled absinthe, even one recreated using historical recipes and methods, so much so that a recent French distiller has had to add pure wormwood essential oil to make a “high-thujone” variant of his product to cater for a different market. It can remain in higher amounts in oils produced by other methods than distillation, or when wormwood is macerated and the macerate not distilled, especially when the plant stems are used, where thujone content is the highest.

The non-French spelling of “Absinth” has been adopted for wormwood-based drinks produced in Central Europe (since the beginning of the 1990s). These products bear very little resemblance to absinthe (with an ‘e’): they are usually bitter and contain little anise, but are marketed to ride the coat-tails of the historical French product’s romantic associations and psycho-active reputation.

Typically, the low herbal content of these drinks means that they do not “louche”. As thujone is still associated with the myth of absinthe as a psycho-active drink, many of them are touted to have “higher thujone content”. A separate, more dramatic, “fire” ritual was invented for those drinks by a Czech manufacturer, in which the sugar cube is drenched in absinth then set on fire, and less water is added (presumably to maximize the very real psycho-active effects of the alcohol). (via Wikipedia)

What is Mead?

— Molly Case on November 15th, 2004 @ 12:07 am Real Life

I usually think of mead as some appalling-tasting brew which only seems right to consume at renfaires and around the holidays with friends who think they are brewers.

Mead is a fermented alcoholic beverage made of honey, water, and yeast. It is sometimes known as “honey wine” (for obvious reasons) and is generally pronounced “meed” though South Africans usually pronounce it “med”, to rhyme with “red.”

The word mead refers to the sugary fluid excreted by flowers. In symbology mead is the tipple of the gods.

A mead that also contains spices (like cloves, cinnamon or nutmeg) or herbs (such as oregano or even lavender or chamomile) is called metheglin. The etymon of this word is possibly “medicine” as healing herbs were often stored as metheglin so they would be available over the winter (as well as making them much easier to swallow).

A mead that contains fruit (such as strawberry, blackcurrant or even rose-hips) is called melomel and was also used as a delicious way to “store” summer produce for the winter.

Mulled mead is a popular winter holiday drink, where mead is warmed (traditionally by having a hot poker plunged into it) and flavoured with spices. (via Wikipedia)

Fleshbot Sex Blog Likes Me

— Molly Case on November 14th, 2004 @ 3:19 pm Real Life

I just got my first press coverage for Sexy Fandom. The Fleshbot sexblog, which is a really big deal, said, “Sexy Trekkies: We know we’ve said in the past that Star Trek porn really isn’t our thing, but we’re starting to gain a new appreciation for chicks in polyester space suits thanks to Molly Case and her Sexy Fandom site, one of our favorite new pornblog discoveries. With descriptions like “Apparently two lesbian crew members of the SS Enterprise have beamed down to an earthlike planet,” how could we resist? Beam us up!”

Fleshbot called my site one of their favorite new pornblog discoveries. I’m really excited. I think of SexyFandom, and actually Fleshbot as well, as more sexblogs than pornblogs because Fleshbot only shows topless nudity and I don’t show any nudity at all. That’s just nitpicking though. We both link to the good stuff and I am thrilled to be getting written about already.

Sexy Fandom 468×60 Banner

— Molly Case on November 14th, 2004 @ 8:25 am About Us

If you’ve been dying to link to SexyFandom graphically, instead of with text, my friend made some nice standard sized 468 pixels by 60 pixels banners you can use to link here.

Banner #1

Banner #2
Banner #3

Action Girls with Guns Naked

— Molly Case on November 13th, 2004 @ 5:11 am Costuming, Movies, Web Sites

What is the story of Actiongirls.com? Based in the future, the world as we know it has been destroyed. Menacing gangs ravage and loot the cities and towns searching for new members. Follow the Actiongirls each week in their ongoing story of survival, alone and outnumbered they must do what it takes to survive in this hostile world. According to the site, all Actiongirls.com Content is unique and Exclusive 100% and Actiongirls.com updates 4-6 times a week, 1 New Movie, 1 New Photoset, 1 New Song, 1 New Set of Movie Captures. This looks to be a bit more creative than the average girls with guns site and it definitely appears to have significantly higher production values. The girls are a little glossy for my taste, but I’m all over the obvious genuine effort put into creating this.

Cafe Flesh

— Molly Case on November 12th, 2004 @ 6:07 am Movies

I first saw the movie Cafe Flesh on a big screen at a science fiction convention. I was underage and a virgin. I was fascinated by the idea of porn with real production values but pretty revolted by the sex.

I mentioned previously that the script was penned by famous TV writer Jerry Stahl. The movie was scored by musician Mitchell Froom who played hammond organ with the The Corrs and audio produced their unplugged video. Plus Froom has composed everything from the title theme for Tomorrow Never Dies to Peewee’s Playhouse and he got married to yum yum Suzanne Vega. I could go on and on with the roster of talent director Stephen Sayadian had to work with, but suffice it to say that they went on to work on projects ranging from Gattaca to The Little Mermaid to the X-Files to Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman

Everyone should see this movie, not necessarily in the dark with the remote in one’s left hand, but because Cafe Flesh was such a daring creative piece of work, so innovative and so jam-packed with talent, that it has gone unparalleled in the twenty-two years since its first theatrical release. Described on the box now as “The time: five years after a nuclear apocalypse. The survivors: post-nuke, thrill-freaks looking for a kick. Able to exist, to sense, to feel everything… but pleasure. In a world destroyed, survivors break down to those who can and those who can’t. 99% are Sex Negatives; call them “erotic casualties.” They want to make love but the mere touch of another person makes them violently ill. The rest, the lucky one percent, are Sex Positives, those whose libidioes escaped unscathed. After the Nuclear Kiss, the Positives remain to love, to perform; and the others can only watch - can only come to Cafe Flesh!”

Cafe Flesh is available on DVD, VHS, DivX, and video on demand streaming.

Smurf Porn

— Molly Case on November 11th, 2004 @ 5:30 am Gadgets, Real Life

Okay, I don’t think there is really lots of smurfporn online. But I’ll give you what I’ve got.

If you inexplicably happen to have access to ColecoVision’s smurfy video game Gargamel’s Castle, there is an easter egg in it: Leave the room at the last screen with Smurfette and the skull and the little blue blonde will drop her dress. For those of you who do not recall, Gargamel the sorcerer and his evil cat Azrael were the arch nemeses of the Smurfs. Smurfette was the girl. The only girl. Fire up your gang bang and homosexuality puns now, folks.

If you want to read some special fiction, there is an old story from the old alt.sex.stories archived at hoboes. It is called The Sexual Adventures of the Smurfs and involves an annual orgy. You may be able to get more insight into the secret lives of Smurfs by reading The Unauthorized Guide to Smurfs around the World, but probably not.

If you translate SexyFandom into smurfese, with the Websmurfer it looks smurfily like this.

I suppose I should not be so smurfily unsavory about these esteemed collectibles, but according to the Smurf Name Generator, I am Cujo Smurf so I think I am supposed to be like this.

Girl Knights in the Stockade

— Molly Case on November 10th, 2004 @ 3:57 am Costuming, Web Sites

The threesome in this gallery is having way way way too much fun with some chainmail and stocks. Outdoors no less.

Fur and Loathing in Las Vegas

— Molly Case on November 9th, 2004 @ 10:22 am Costuming, Movies, Real Life

What is up with the Furry Posts? I just saw the infamous furry episode of CSI on DVD and it brought this particular subgenre of fandom to mind. The Las Vegas Crime Scene Investigators have to figure out how a man in a cute racoon suit ended up dead and they descend into an oddly dark little corner of fictional furry fandom to find out what actually happened. I wanna make it with Sexy Kitty too. But only in the costume of course.

I believe that brilliant writer Jerry Stahl is largely responsible for this bit of furry depravity being on CSI. Jerry Stahl is probably best known for the movie Permanent Midnight which was based on his autobiographical account of his battles with heroin and addiction. He also wrote the science fiction porn cult classic Cafe Flesh under the name Herbert W. Day.

I love when a great TV show like this comes out on DVD because I get to enjoy it without all the scheduling nuisances of regular television. This particular episode of CSI is called Fur and Loathing in Las Vegas which is pretty much the wittiest name ever for a show like that. I heartily recommend picking up the CSI - Fourth Season DVD which includes Fur and Loathing in Las Vegas.

CSI - the Complete First Season, CSI - Season 2, and CSI - Crime Scene Investigation, The Complete Third Season are also all available now on DVD. I went with the econo option and just bought the complete box set with all four seasons of all the existing episodes on DVD.

Next Page »