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avclub-0c2304bdad6b851911bc217300c13102--disqus

This is ok by me. Maybe it will free Alison Brie up to do something where she will get naked.

I played oblivion for about 5 hours when I got trapped in an oblivion gate.  It was stupidly annoying.  When I got out, I was immediately arrested because I had stolen a horse about an hour into the game.

Can we please, PLEASE dispense with the "this season isn't all that great compared to the earlier, Larry David seasons" business?  It's been done now with the last couple seasons' reviews, and it's rendered patently false by the end, as episode after episode is like "Dang, I forgot how good / hilarious/ timely this

It's from Search for Spock!

Yeah, the additional layer of illusion is definitely a possibility.  However,  I think there is less direct evidence for that than the idea that the machines can inhabit human flesh.  Humans *are* hooked up to the matrix after all - is it that big of a leap to think that the machines have developed "wireless"

Well, I've always liked Reloaded, and absolutely hated Revolutions, except for the relatively cool revelation that Neo is essentially a wetware program (program uploaded into a human brain).  This is supported by the fact that Agent Smith can upload himself into a human at the end of Reloaded, and essentially is the

False.  It's one of the funniest shows on tv right now, especially after last nights' Sunny travesty.

I don't have a problem at all comparing the Planet Earth series to Malick's cinematography cues.  Earth is perhaps the most gorgeous documentary series ever shot.  I'm sure their camera guys and directors have all seen Malick's films, or are in some way informed by him.  But who cares?  The stuff is astounding.

Too much Sauce!

Something that Frank excels at.

It's just Two Broke Girls in a cadillac /  ooooooWeeeeyoooooooo

yes - he should change his username to obscureknowledgeburns

"The Seven" claims the distinction of being the episode of Seinfeld I've seen the least, perhaps 2-3 times only.

If you guys like this and the first album, you really, really should check out Blissed Out, which I guess is not technically a proper "LP" but is compilation of pre-Sub Pop recordings.  It is brilliant, raw, and contains my favorite song, "Brite Futures".

It is, and they are pretty good.

This prince / like wanna do a hold em', go ahead now / dis prince, like donna do a bold 'em, ain't in his head now / marry him, a boddah will condone you, dats whata say now / marry me, a boddah do dis bone you, da fotta nay now / marry him, or marry me, I'm that lick ya can't ya see, I aint got no feature or family

I still love that build-up at the intro to Cherub Rock.  Who the hell would say that "hasn't held up well"?  Can you point to a single radio friendly song in the last fucking 5 years (hell, make that 10 years) that contains that much rage in 25 seconds?

Yes.  I replied above, but I feel the same way.  Zooropa, to me, sounds as relevant today as when I first heard it on cassette in 1993.  It is really surprising to experience that.  Even Babyface, while still pretty silly, is pretty prescient.

Zooropa is seriously unfairly maligned.  It is a stone-cold brilliant album, from start to finish (even Babyface, silly back then, works a lot better now in the ubiquitous-porn era).

El shaddai, El shaddai, er kom karna adonai. age to age you're still the same, by the power of his name.