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    Wasn't there another show where the white protagonist started getting really arrogant about her situation, tattooed herself, and captioned it with a zippy tagline?

    If they actually follow through on that last idea, I'd rather they wait until the baby from the first movie is of age. Kind of like how Tarantino won't do Kill Bill 3 until Black Mamba's daughter is a certain age.

    Hey, at least he's still got [adult swim]'s China, Illino-oh wait.

    Speaking of Jonah Hill, i would kill for an SNL sketch-to-cinema feature of Hill as his Benihana Borscht Belt comic, along with Hader. If MacGruber could get a movie/sequel, then…

    Don't get too excited.

    Yeah, I had to do a double take when they busted out Tae Kwan Do. That was too Jenji Kohan even for Jenji Kohan.

    She got a show and Apatow saw it. She'd been doing/has been doing stand-up for years and people barely cared.

    Best part of the article is the "Available at Amazon" feed at the bottom.

    I'd say that was an A-worthy entry if mediocrity and unreasonable expectations didn't still loom over the production as a whole. Maybe Pizza wanted to do Season 1 in reverse, where the beginning was weird and the end is palpable.

    Well, if you want to continue with the ticket sale analogy, you still paid for your ticket even if you walked out of the theater early.

    They screened the movie early in a few places and after having seen it in April, it feels weird to see the ramp-up in promotion now. King James was definitely a highlight.

    The initial shock of how bad the first two episodes are can't be understated. The last two episodes just sort of hold everything in place tightly enough that you're not ready to give up on it yet. If there's one thing I'm getting tired of, though, it's the routine of Frank shaking down a new individual or group and

    This is the performance of Wiig's career, my God. This movie is basically The Room if it were an indie drama.

    Frank does say "I've always hated these things; what way is that to greet yourself to the world?" overwrought-ness aside, I think they probably did discuss it.

    I actually found Vince Vaugn to be the least problematic element of the season… until this episode. Good shot in the arm for Velcoro, who was absolutely dreadful in the first two.

    They might as well make those seven characters in that tweet the main cast; I doubt many would notice.

    The music in general was very good on this show. Not to mention it's original score, which I feel for the most part, TV shows take for granted these days in favor of licensed songs.

    I love this show. It was a beautiful mess, much like its protagonist. Orange is competent and compelling, but in this golden age of TV, it doesn't really stand out in 2013 as much as Weeds did in 2005 to 2009.

    I like the one where John Oliver interrupts the news to talk about a city street named simply "Balls."

    Yeah, it's just beautiful, barely-dressed women and little people running around.