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avclub-0bc8e4beb9c95707e6f057526375e8bd--disqus

Starting to realize I'm the only one who likes listening to them this time of year best, and only finds a handful of their songs "wintry".

Yeah, what a bright, bold criminal. 95 times out of 100, even Sally and Bobby would have seen through her right away, but she had a story and stuck to it, even on the phone with 911!

But now we know the origin of Don's legendary aversion to wooden spoons!

Somewhere Wayne Coyne is seeing that idea and thinking, "Yeah, obviously we should do that first, but how can I work a vial of each of my bodily fluids into the packaging?!"

Precisely. May in England and America bear little resemblance to one another (though it is only 59 in Baltimore just now).

I still remember listening to High Violet for the first time on a cool, sunny spring day in Norwich, England, and it all seemed just perfect to me. Particularly "Lemonworld".

@avclub-832d86d3a05e2b4973c329471ee9d6c4:disqus Good point. But, maybe this is just hindsight being 20/20, Emile seeing MLK's assassination in particular as some sort of sign that capitalism was falling in on itself now looks absolutely ridiculous.

A short dress is technically the proper way to mourn the death of a Kennedy.

By the way, did Weiner make up the surname Chaough? I've never heard it before. It kind of sounds like it should be a Rhode Island boarding school that's purposefully difficult for outsiders to pronounce.

Also, I eagerly await Todd's forthcoming documentary on the meaning of "Room 503".

Don't worry, according to Megan's dad, it all means the proletarian revolution is totally coming by the early '70s, at the latest.

"That's RIGHT, Mr. Wilson, Daisy's the one you want. Go kill her. Sorry for the misundahstanding." 
*Is sad for a while*
*Teams up with Nick for rakish adventures*
*Defeats FDR for the presidency*
*Kills Hitler personally*
*Killed in his swimming pool in the '60s by Tom Buchanan, who's just figured out what happened that

I always thought the lesson of Roger and Pete is that, if you're born rich, inheriting a business and being a steward of it turns you into much less of an asshole than using connections to get rich in an industry not even your rich parents approve of.

Resolved: Cooper and Peggy are the only major characters who'd feel comfortable if they were transported to the present day. The former because he's a Randian, the latter because she could adapt to anything. Ok, probably Megan, too.

@avclub-ee2e9e1447fcb49c96e19af584ca11b4:disqus I see what you mean, but because of my background and family, I've developed a high level of tolerance for bland, saccharine conversation. The alcoholic wife of a leftist academic? Probably not so much.

Ken Cosgrove: going on about being from Vermont way before it was cool.

He'd probably relate to "Sorry-Grateful" and "Being Alive," but despise everything in between.

How awesome would it have been if Peaches had actually known a little French? I mean, could she could have at least realized she was being called an idiot. I don't know why, but the idea of Marie getting embarrassed by a stupid person delights me.

Hope she has a clause in her contract with Phipps saying she gets to occasionally drink at work. Seems only fair.

And yet nary a mention of "The One Where They Take the Cinnamon Challenge." Classic Phoebe episode.