affrosponge88--disqus
Affrosponge88
affrosponge88--disqus

"Villain" is kind of a harsh word, but Hector is experiencing the same thing I did when I first set out to watch it (I've seen the first three seasons so far). Lorelei is refreshingly human, in that she has some very bad qualities that do not go away overnight. Her stubbornness is a badge of honor for her, but is

I quite liked that. I can't say that I loved it, but I loved parts of it. It would be hard for me to accept any finale at this point in the show's life as "perfect" or truly satisfying, but this one certainly came close. As somebody who's not a fan of Horror Fiction, the season seven pitches did not really do much for

Finished Maude S1. What a lovely show. One of my all-time favorites now.

Barenaked Ladies has a new album coming out this next week (shut up, they're fundamental) and it is entitled: Silverball, so I guess that solves that mystery!

Yeah, I think I'm overexaggerating a tad, but it comes from a place of disappointment. It's a great show, and the writers are good, it's mostly the studio audience's reaction (though it's not entirely their fault since the moment is staged for such a reaction) that caught me off guard, and then for the show to let it

Taxi season 2's "Shut it Down" is a prime example of the only kind of "datedness" I can't handle from a sitcom. Give me all the topical references, very special episodes, and occasionally skewed social norms, but sometimes a show should have just known better. Having an episode end with Danny DeVito's character

I guess I have to see Ratatouille, huh? I don't know why it never appealed to me (just shamelessly avoiding it because of its premise, which is foolish, I know), but I didn't realized it was this beloved, and I have now fallen in love with Brad Bird's films over the past few years…

Yeah, there's something seriously condescending and gross about this… Particularly that second one:
"Hey girl… I don't need to see the pain and humiliation you suffered as a sex slave. I believe you."

Finally watched "Modern Espionage" and today's episode. Gotta say that while "Modern Espionage" was indeed good, today's was my favorite of the season, and may be one of my favorite episodes in general. Every character was perfectly utilized (even Elroy had a standout moment, who has always felt superfluous to me in a

Tomorrowland: B+

You guys are my inspiration, my rock, my springboard for my wildest sexual fantasies…

Me and Earl and the Dying Girl is so twee for the first 10 minutes and then almost drops it completely (outside of the home movies they make).

No wonder MTV no longer shows music videos…

Jeff Winger is disbarred and suspended from his law firm when it is discovered that he lied about possessing his bachelor's degree. This leaves him with no choice but to enroll at Greendale Community College to earn a legitimate degree. Jeff quickly becomes attracted to his activist classmate, Britta Perry, and

/walks across the room and hugs SBT/

Actually, nowhere around me was showing it in IMAX because Ultron was still occupying those theaters.

My Long-Awaited And Totally Wrong-Headed Review of Mad Max: Fury Road

"Edith I told you I can't build your candy house! It will fall apart, the sun will melt the candy, it won't work!"