allthedings--disqus
allthedings
allthedings--disqus

It's particularly true in advertising. As Roger says, "When the client moves, you move!" And what he really means is, unlike most businesses, in advertising it's not about keeping the best people around; it's about keeping continuity for clients. So, many times the better, say copywriter, working on a client who

Nobody cares, dumbbell. You're a tired, old, self-righteous school marm. You're free to keep making dumb comments, but if you do, people are going to ridicule you for making dumb comments. Which you keep doing, so how's this: Hey, you just made another dumb comment! Haha, you're a hoot. And I assume you hate your

Haha, there you go again! What a pointless scold. Did your mom lie to you about your dad or something? Who made you the arbiter of how people should behave, you lazy prig.

You're a little fixated on that. Get over it. It's inconsequential. Your indignation, I mean.

I've said it before and I'll say it again: Penny and Sheldon will end up together, shocking themselves more than anyone. They complement each other completely, and their character chemistry is a million times stronger than any other pairing on the show. Any scene where they're alone is the best scene on that episode.

This may get said here each week, but a few thoughts after watching tonight's episode, which is only the third or fourth ep I've watched this year. I really liked the episode where Sheldon and Penny took a test to see if they would fall in love, but tonight's show was well below a B-, and none the reasons bode well

I liked when Jessica noted that Eddie broke his fore-arm.

It would be rich to have her holding a press conference to resign, with the Governor having to stand at her side and be ridiculed like she was at the start of the series. That's actually not a bad plot line.

A+ I'm late, I know, but still wanted to add a grade.

100% chance that she'd have her pc auto-lock within just a few minutes with a password or even a token required to wake it up. Maybe — maybe — the tech she was working with mentioned it to someone and they got it from him or something, but that's probably a longer shot than the other Cary going into her pc to get the

"I have no agility." That's just a rare line, and typical of this show in the way it seems so effortlessly thrown in, but with a humor and humanness that defined 'Selfie' from the beginning. Sad, and a little infuriating, to see it go.

But isn't it awesome that there's a network show that doesn't insist on telling you what to think about a character's reaction, but lets different people interpret it differently? That alone is kind of rare, actually. And, while I thought she was uncomfortable being praised for what she knew wasn't true, in hindsight

Classic scene in 'The Candidate', where Robert Redford asks, "What now?" (if you don't know the movie or that scene, i don't want to spoil it, but it's a brilliant moment, the kind they don't put in movies very often these days, except maybe in a movie like 'Michael Clayton'.)

Marissa acting like she's a senior member of the campaign staff, thinking that everyone is dying to hear her opinions about every aspect of Alicia's campaign bodes well for that element over the rest of the season. I really thought David Lee and Louis Canning gave up way too easily on the office, but I understand the

Gillian does a great job as Eliza, so I'm not complaining one bit, but Krysten Ritter also would've killed in that role.

Evidently you are totally unfamiliar with the depth and breadth of The Good Wife.

I disagree. I think 'Selfie', unlike almost any other show before it, integrates the Internet very naturally into its stories and characters' lives. They expect the viewer to know why it's funny that John Cho thought he was bragging when he said he's on LinkedIn, or how much we know about Joan just from learning that

The best unemployed math teacher ever featured on the lead story of the hometown news broadcast, yeah.

On Sundance Channel's 'The Writers' Room' this week, they said the show is shot 3 weeks ahead of broadcast. Plus, a lot of it is shot in NYC, too.

Np, I've done much worse.