I do like those Criterion booklets. You can just slip one in your pocket and read it during your lunch break.
I do like those Criterion booklets. You can just slip one in your pocket and read it during your lunch break.
The world is just one big Friday Buzzkill now, so it would be redundant.
It sounds like @avclub-454a7bfd685393329597fdb7a92b7969:disqus is being gross, but he's really just going to peek over the top of the stall at Henry Winkler.
Well, yeah, that's my point. They publish highbrow and lowbrow articles, but the lowbrow ones tend to get more attention (including people upset that the lowbrow articles exist in the first place). If you're gonna be mad at someone, be mad at us commenters for being such philistines.
There was a Robert Bresson Primer last week, and it currently has 97 comments. But yes, let's all act like this is an either-or proposition.
A few years ago, the major record labels were the defendents in a class-action lawsuit over price-fixing CDs. They eventually settled, but rather than compensating the plaintiffs, they made an agreement to donate CDs to public libraries. Sounds OK, except the CDs they donated turned out to be mostly junk they…
I like how he talked about driving his dad's second-hand PT Cruiser when he was in high school. Tom Hanks once bought a PT Cruiser? The early '00s were a strange time.
If scientists did invent a vehicle that let a Busey into your house, they would never tell anyone about it.
She famously has a thing for short, funny, bald men.
"Habemus Comunitas!"
I've got an idea…since you guys get nothing but grief whenever we get a Community notification, why don't you tag all news updates/articles about Community-related subjects with NCIS: Los Angeles and save the actual Community tag for when there's a return date. That way when we see an NCIS: Los Angeles notification,…
Hey, folks…let's all consolidate our Community notification bellyaching in this here thread.
In that case, my initial post was totally serious and not at all a joke.
I'm surprised that no one has jumped on the obvious implication that "he dies in the mid-afternoon" is a reference to Hemingway's Death in the Afternoon, which is about bullfighting. Clearly, whoever dies will be the victim of a bull running wild on Greendale's campus. Once you have this bit of information, well,…
The wrong Whitney died!
FLAGGED
"Hey, Todd, maybe I'm not too upset about there being too many good shows on at the same time because your brother is STANDING in the middle of AFGHANISTAN!"
It was Ted Mosby's wife, wasn't it? She killed her at the fireworks factory.
Not to mention stockpiles of Black Gold.
@avclub-ae27321e41369b1e30714d870976c1cc:disqus said that.