The answer is yes.
The answer is yes.
I guess you weren't wrong? I mean, the humor was derived through offensiveness. If that's not your cup of tea, then it was never gonna be funny to you.
Maybe he can finally get Bitch Hunter greenlit on NBC.
I would honestly rather have Daniel Tosh just because maybe, maybe I could see something besides literally everything I expect to see in a MacFarlane show happening. Or, barring that, Tosh is bound to be too offensive for Fox and they would cancel it faster than they would MacFarlane's show.
He is on TBS and is not Conan or a rerun of Family Guy/Big Bang Theory. That show is as good as dead, man.
I have watched Arrested Development approximately 90 times, sir. Allow me to tell you how uncultured your tastes in humor are.
People watch Chelsea Handler of their own free will? I thought her show only survived this long because people fell asleep during The Soup back when her show was on after that.
Yeah, I actually found it pretty humorous. Comedians shooting the shit and being as mean as possible is generally pretty funny stuff. I know Jeselnik's perceived "bro" persona rubs a lot of people the wrong way, but it was legitimately a much better show than most gave it credit for.
Yeah, honestly I saw this movie as a kid and loved it, then later in life was amazed to find out that it received such a negative reaction. Then watched it again just to see if I was just a dumb little kid, and no, I still really like the movie. But then, I'm a sap for any movie that plays with "movie/TV/cartoon…
This episode had a lot of good parts (the proposal at the end, I liked the crushed glass gag) but Robin's plot just didn't really work for me because she just seems to be so one-dimensional this season and I don't really like it. She's kinda losing more and more personality just to become Female Barney who does wacky…
Apparently they did film at ridiculous hours which really wore on the kids.
C'mon man, you're letting nostalgia blind you. Vital Information was always just a bunch of terrible non-sequiturs, not material that could be lifted or lowered. I liked it too when I was younger, but Jesus, don't try watching it again, because reality will let you right the hell down.
Ultron, could you kick up the 4d3d3d3?
I am banking hard on the anonymity of the internet to cover my tracks. I'll probably erase the comment in a while in the event I get too freaked about our corporate overlords.
There was also the pillow world in Puhoy where Finn lives his entire life in a world made of pillows, getting married, producing pillow offspring, and dying, only to wake up from it as if from a dream. OR WAS IT?
I really liked Static Shock. Of course, I was in it's target audience back in the day so quippy superheroes (even if the jokes weren't fantastic) were hilarious to me. I guess what I really wanted was a good Spider-Man show, but Static Shock scratched that itch.
Let me give you an inside perspective into the Million Second Quiz.
Confession: I was in 7th grade and they didn't cancel classes that day, so all that happened was that they turned on the TV and let us watch as we went class to class, but I had kind of drifted off in class so I didn't hear what the teacher had said. I thought the collapse of the first tower was some sort of…
@avclub-6ffc79f9decf633c29b09e6c25621195:disqus I don't think it did happen in DC. Of course, DC has the advantage that, since most of its major cities are fictional, they can really kind of get by with not addressing it. Marvel doesn't have that luxury since pretty much every one of their heroes lives right in…
I don't know, I think Maher became a much more unlikeable asshole. But what do I know, clearly people do like it. I mean damn, what season is Real Time on at this point?