afroallura
Jess
afroallura

You know how in movies with alternate dimensions they’ll have a character wake up and look out the window, pulling back a curtain to reveal society has completely gone to shit?

The people behind the scenes at The Big Bang Theory have skirted this topic for nearly a decade; to delve into it so deeply here would be a seemingly progressive step that retroactively makes the parent show’s sense of humor—so frequently pegged to Sheldon’s difficult nature—look inordinately cruel. Should Young

I think we could all have predicted that this would be terrible. But it’ll be worth sticking with it for the series finale, when it is revealed that the events of The Big Bang Theory are all taking place in Young Sheldon’s mind as he stares into a snowglobe.

The best explanation I heard was this. So many of these guys are the basement dwelling stereotypes you read about, the ones who can’t get a date. They’ve convinced themselves that it’s because they like comics and SF and fantasy and nerdy things that girls don’t get. Now, with more and more women becoming fans and

If there are women who have interests similar to theirs but women still don’t want to have anything to do with them, then maybe there is another reason that women don’t want to have anything to do with them.

They believe “SJWs” forced Harmon to hire women, and thus anything they dislike about this season is the fault of those women.

And the only thing I can say is if you’re lucky enough to make a show that is really good that people like, that means some bad people are going to like it too.

I really like the show, but its fandom is one of the worst I’ve ever seen. A bunch of people seem to think that the show endorses Rick’s behavior and philosophy and...no, it realllllly doesn’t.

This has been the best season of Rick and Morty so far so way to go ladies.

Jesus Tapdancing Christ! The women who write the show these fuckheads love so much are getting harassed & doxxed for writing the show these fuckheads love so much. That is android head-exploding levels of irrationality.

The Belle room was her personal fantasy, dating back to her troubled childhood. What Mr. Peanutbutter gave her was his interpretation of it. While it was not how he intended the gesture, he essentially took a dream that she cherished and shattered it.

Alright, I’ve been dying to bring this up here since I spent way too long researching this yesterday after my rewatch of the series.

I really liked the reveal about BoJack and Hollyhock being half-siblings and I loved BoJack agreeing to do the show for Princess Carolyn. I didn’t want to watch PC on a downward spiral so I’m glad they seem to have resolved that arc.

I liked how they had a segment from Horsin’ Around right before that explaining how genetic testing is an imperfect science.

If only we all had such an awful backup plan just waiting around for us.

The screaming and crying from small Bea when her doll was thrown into the fire was too much (,man!) for me.

The season had been teasing a grander view at Bea’s backstory for a while, and it was genuinely moving to see it all play out here, albeit through the warped lens of her addled mind. By the end of the episode, I felt like I understood the decisions Bea had made, the perfectly relatable reasons she’d made the mistakes

“Can you taste the ice cream, Mom?” “Oh Bojack. It’s so.. delicious”. I was prepared for this episode to end with Bojack saying or doing something awful to his mother, because that’s what Bojack always does, but for him to show kindness? To put his lifetime of justified grievances with his mother behind him to give a

Well, since everyone went to see American Assassin, I’m guessing they were hoping a scene in which Jesus (holding a machine gun) kicks down a door, then announces “I died for you. Now it’s your turn, bitches”. That’s how allegories work, yes?

If you go to see a Darren Aronofsky, David Lynch and other such directors’ movie and expect an ordinary story, told in a coherent and logical way, you didn’t do your homework.