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Erlend Lunde Holbek
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I’m from Norway, and we have an HBO streaming service. It usually uploads shows the morning after they’ve aired in the US (with the exception of Last Week Tonight and Bill Maher, which require an extra day for subtitles or whatever). This season of Game of Thrones, however, is simulcast. Which means there’s a large

I'm not sure Rob Dean knows what superfluous means

I think you're mistaken there. Harrison Ford was in the second trilogy, Episodes X-XII. He took over the role of Han Solo from his cousin, Larry Ford.

Yeah, and they're not being written on time. That's happened on Community a few times before, most famously on Conspiracy Theories and Interior Design, which was literally written act by act before each day of filming, with no real plan for the ending. The last thing he mentioned on the podcast was something like "we

He keeps repeating that Yahoo are wonderful. They're only producing a couple of other shows, and they're putting a lot of money into this season, both in production and marketing. But the writers are mostly new, characters are disappearing and he's never quite sure of how the tone is working. Last week he said he's

I'm a Harmontown listener, and he seems really frustrated. They're apparently more behind schedule than ever, and we all know how the tail end of S5 ended up.

My favorite part of 601: An out of focus poster reading "Do not serve this man" with a photo of Dan Harmon in character as the former dean he played in a bunch of promo videos before season 1.

The Babadook and A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night were massively critically acclaimed horror movies a few months ago.

Wow, I had the complete opposite response. I loved the character and plot momentum of the last three episodes, and I thought they had the funniest moments of the season. I also didn't find any "small town hick" schtick in the show at all. It's a show, much like 30 Rock, populated almost entirely by incompetent dummies.

That was an actual problem that the Parks writers struggled with. The show was always right on the verge of cancellation, so probably ten episodes along the run were written to function as finales. The characters were too damn happy and self-actualized, and they had difficulty undermining that without losing the

I just got through the season. The first few episodes (the ones covered in this review) drag a bit as they try to find the show, but the last three are up there with the second season of 30 Rock. Brilliantly cast, funny and serialized.

I really like Community, but I always feel like the trailers and ads for it play up the Tumblr-y aspects of the show and make it feel like a live action cartoon/reference machine. Which, of course, it sometimes is.

I really loved the pilot and premise of this show, but I've been losing interest to the point where I'm a couple of weeks behind, and wondering if I'm gonna catch up at all. Often the absurd sequences are just loud and silly, and Josh is frustratingly stuck in the same situations. Could someone convince me of why I

I seem to be in the minority on this, but this is my favorite episode in months. Cudi was really charming and not only game but very capable. The Luggage bit was consistently funny and Noel Wells was much better than I've ever seen her.

The best album Pete Yorn has ever worked on.

I mean, he was on Comedy Bang Bang, if that counts as experience.

Scott Aukerman was on Chris Hardwick's podcast this week and teased that Reggie's replacement would be someone he didn't think he could get, who would bring a new audience to the show. My best guess was Jack Black. This is much, much cooler.

Objectivity isn't achievable. We're all inherently incredibly biased, and not admitting that is one of the main causes of the weird media culture gap that's risen in the past decades. Objectivity stands in opposition to comedy, art and storytelling. Opinion and uncertainty are very important parts of the news world,

It's the opening scenes of Evil Dead 2 and 3?