avclub-01c2bff254aa9799912374128532e5b3--disqus
George Oscar
avclub-01c2bff254aa9799912374128532e5b3--disqus

Yeah, and I think that was part of the same discussion about how one letter can make a big difference in web searches or search history or something. Jane's example was looking for a pair of black Crocs.

@avclub-1b1f9a3e639ecc53f335314fc9d8403b:disqus Ooh, Die Hard is a good example. For whatever reason, the only one I've seen in that series is the one with Jeremy Irons where they're stealing gold or something.

It would be a hilarious middle finger to the audience if they made all of Season 2 a prequel that ends right where Season 1 began.

I hope they just go balls-out-ridiculous and introduce an entire new set of suspects that they waste the whole season on before revealing that it was…whoever the hell the first suspect was.

WHY SEPARATE KNOB? WHY SEPARATE KNOB?

I have sort of a different twist on the "you MUST love this movie" thing (although I'm right there with you on the Matrix movies).

I enjoyed his antics at the (whatever it was called) convention because I could totally see myself acting pretty much the same way if I was dragged to something that ridiculous instead of the Cubs Convention. I would definitely point out how stupid everything was and call people hippies.

Me too, there's not a major network show that more consistently makes me wonder how some of its lines make it on air.

Might have been my favorite line of the episode, especially combined with Penny's quick, "Big time…" addition immediately after Jane said it.

Same. No idea why I didn't see it coming, but him kicking the headlight out was an unexpected big laugh for me.

If the audience didn't know he was a narc from the beginning then all the classic sitcom misunderstanding jokes (like the fantastic run at the end with him talking about nailing the guy in the hallway and her watching) wouldn't have been funny, they would have just been a dude saying increasingly sexual things about

You'll never hear me say anything negative about a Desmond episode and I agree that Season 3 ends very strongly.

@avclub-93bf0903fd207bdfd856ede8e84f7d1f:disqus , I feel the exact same way about the album - it was my first exposure to them and, as much as I suck at ranking things, it's easily one of my favorite albums. I remember seeing the CD a bunch of times in the "punk" section of my local record store and wondering who they

My recent run was from that episode until the Nikki/Paulo episode. Since the episodes I watched were bookended by those two, I probably have a bitter taste in my mouth.

It's too bad for this show that they're relying so much on their Lost alums to garner interest in it. It's really not serving them well by trying to be Lost: Fairy Tales. Like @avclub-140c3a685cc4991ce11dae00e71b9d9d:disqus, I understand wanting something to fill that void, but I'm actually re-watching Lost right now

I kept waiting for a "you look like a gay droog" or similar joke because Clockwork Orange was the first thing I thought of when I saw Max.

But it was redeemed by the old guy passing by as she said it and being curmodgeon-y about it.

Goodtime buddies is such a great way to refer to a group of mischievous people.

Maybe I'll use that as my excuse for not getting it immediately. The show isn't brainy, so I power down the 'ol noodle when I'm watching it.

@avclub-33c07d594bde6f6889e135ac36a2b8d5:disqus I used to do the same thing if there was nothing on I wanted to watch. Then I'd see something scroll by that started in the next half hour and get bummed out when I realized it was on a movie channel we didn't have.