Quality episode.
I give it a B+, ranking it somewhere in the middle of the series. The goat keeps it from going higher. It was such a relief to see Mom and Flexo again.
Quality episode.
I give it a B+, ranking it somewhere in the middle of the series. The goat keeps it from going higher. It was such a relief to see Mom and Flexo again.
Fuck you, sir. Fuck you very, very much.
Coma coma coma coma COMA CHAMELEON!
Trabing norm doog.
Excellent review, Rabin.
You ain't not a dorkus.
Fuck off, man. There isn't an episode until season 3 (Homer at the Bat) worthy of less than an A-.
Already the best thing on television.
This episode was incredible. Just fucking brilliant.
You're right again, Leonard. "Poker/Divorce" is the best television episode I've seen this year.
Typo.
Paragraph 2 should read "The Suite Life of Zack and Cody". 'Life' is used twice in the review. Nice joke, though.
First episode was great.
A- is about right. The second episode is fucking revolutionary. A+.
Home Movies is a show made for adults. I mean, it's suitable for children, but they are not the audience and I imagine they'd just be bored and not get it.
Brilliant, classic episode.
One of season 1's best. A+
The panda-rape episode, "Homer's Dignity" (the worst. episode. ever.), is in season 12.
That would be the best way.
There's virtually no chance, but
a Thundercats reboot on Adult Swim in the vein of Sealab 2021 would be amazing. It isn't like kids today know shit about the Thundercats anyway.
RIP to an influential, elegant comic goddess.
You will be greatly missed, Ms. McClanahan. Thank you for being a friend.
Leonard, keep up the great work. Don't apologize, man. The Red Ball is dull; I agree. The visuals were nice and everything (though I'm also not a big anime fan, typically), but I felt it suffered from a lack of humor, mostly because there weren't enough jokes, and the ones that were there mostly fell flat for me. A C…
One more thing - I'm a "real fan" of The Boondocks, and I didn't get most of the references in "Stinkmeaner 3". Sue me.
Do you hear those sirens? It's the hyperbole police. They've come for you.
Thank you, Tuchman.