avclub-153214f264737adddf9b6683799258e2--disqus
annev6
avclub-153214f264737adddf9b6683799258e2--disqus

It looks like Mike White deleted his Twitter account too - though maybe my mobile app is just being funky and not showing his Tweets any more? SOMEONE NEEDS TO GO TO HIS HOUSE AND CHECK ON HIM.
I don't even know what to do with myself. I feel like I just got cancelled.

YES! She is excellent in that, too. I'm so happy she is on all the TVs again.

I believe that was Shakespeare's definition of a comedy, also. And I never said no jokes. There were jokes, there are also jokes. I'm just saying not everything that's a comedy needs to be a gag-reel. Sometimes it's about telling a good story with a happy ending.

I think The Farm would be a show I would watch if it were not on NBC and not a mockumentary. I would be way into seeing Dwight in a new setting with his family, and we'd get to see his reaction to the airing of The Office, which would be neat. But I think it'd be refreshing to do it straight, without the talking head

I'm filing this as one of the best episodes of Community I've seen. I'm including all seasons in that statement. I really enjoyed the trout farm bits. Annie playing off Troy's automatic negation was very well done, and I thought it was pretty impressive how far they went to convince us Chang wasn't faking. They went

I'm so happy Jenny Slate is on TV again.

Ahhhhh, I'm gonna call it that from now on. Genius.

And with the knife arm, no less! I get that Merle is going through a change of heart or something, but he has yet to DO anything I can recall that would make the group think of him as anything but a guy who'd just as soon shoot you as look at you.

@avclub-8a1c882768760c8e996715653ff5c7cb:disqus Oh totally, Rick gets it, but by the end of the episode he's planning to give up Michonne and I don't understand why. A lot of the "moral dilemmas" they give him to struggle with end up making him seem kind of dopey. But ultimately I love Rick's cop mode.

Yeah, I was really hoping for more of a detective/genius serial killer dynamic like you'd see on a Law and Order with a recurring evil serial killer character. More wit, I guess? But I think the problem is they make Rick dumber than he has any reason to be quite often. He was a sheriff in a small town, a man of quite

She had a moment there when both Rick and The Governor threw her out where it felt like she was about to scream "Even the other fictional characters in this show can't stand me!"

I TELL EVERYONE ABOUT TOPSY.
USE THE INTERNET, BOOKS ARE STUPID.
SHHHHHHH.

1. I was really hoping Rick would use his interrogation skills to get a little more out of the governor. It felt like that's what was happening at first. I like it when Rick goes into cop mode in dealing with people.

I liked Willy Jr. and I thought he was pretty necessary considering I thought Jeff's speech to him (and to himself) in the car was the best part of the episode. Also, I think doing this without having someone there who knew Jeff's dad would've left a lot of ambiguity on whether or not Jeff's dad really was a terrible

I named him Ted and decided that he's just the one survivor of the apocalypse who is so annoying even the zombies don't want to eat him. I guess the zombies got past it in the end though, poor guy.

This episode just goes to show how much more fun it is to see how the world has changed and how the characters react to it. Also I really want to know how that hitchhiker has survived more than a year given that he seems to think running at top speed and SCREAMING is a good idea? It's like, come on, guy, are you new

I liked this episode, but I liked it least of all the episodes I've seen. So, of course, it gets probably the highest AV Club rating since I started checking them. I may be one of the few people who liked The Mindy Project better when it was kind of a bucket o' crazy. I guess I don't really care what sitcoms are

@avclub-606b258c6ad7936df83152886586b232:disqus I don't think Jim could be any MORE tied down to Scranton than he is, frankly. He has a wife and kids there, both their parents are there, he owns a home there, the job that pays his bills is there. That is, I think , the definition of being tied down.

I have a theory that Andy's "likability" has always been rooted in his own self-interest, and therefore is just another aspect of his villany. The Office wouldn't really work with a villain anyone actually hated, it would screw up the whole at-the-end-of-the-day-everyone's-fine tone of the show. I agree there's an

I don't think ANYONE knows what "sports marketing" is, or why a bunch of people who were formerly warehouse managers/paper salesmen (insert that list of random former jobs they all rattled off in Darryl's interview) would be qualified to do it. Athlead makes NO sense as a company, real or imagined.
Why would Darryl