I wonder how many among those who starred you actually read the piece? I doubt it was all of them.
I wonder how many among those who starred you actually read the piece? I doubt it was all of them.
If there was one perfect illustration of Betteridge’s Law Of Headlines, that could well be it.
Her album was released barely over a year ago, so I guess you could say we haven’t gotten to the career stage of Billie Eilish.
More stars.
I guess there was a reason this didn’t air with the main show.
I remember watching it.
Blah blah blah.
To the question: “how many words can you write about a 50-minute show?”, the answer is, “over 2,200”.
To be fair, you started (farted? doublefarted?) it.
You remember too.
Remember people telling you he wasn’t advertising it, and that the word has a precise meaning that was lost on you?
Clearly you didn’t read the sentence I was referring to.
Another thing that mostly irritates me is the grading system itself: what separates a B- from a C+? How can they quantify a movie, book or series on an 18-point scale? These are not maths or history tests.
I shudder to think what those comments are, given how mine was of next to no interest whatsoever...
Heaven forbid :-)
Is Dolores gone for good? I hope so, honestly. She’s kind of a drag. I’ll still watch, of course. I’m too deep now.
That comment is so much more funny and interesting than the article itself. Well done!
After reading the article, I had to go back to check that I had correctly seen a B- rating. Because the article itself seems to describe a D+ show, at best.
I had no idea they had done that on Glee - you just gave me another good reason to have stopped watching after season 1 :-)
a “timely inquiry into our macabre preoccupation with true crime.”