avclub-1a1d7f3030811437e2c0133bde1e7c44--disqus
kirble
avclub-1a1d7f3030811437e2c0133bde1e7c44--disqus

. . .and the deep collars.

Kelly Rowland of the UK version, on the other hand, satisfies your three criteria. So does Sara Bareilles (Scherzinger's replacement on The Sing-Off). Those shows are clearly better because of Nicole Scherzinger's absence.

In the latter portion of the 4th season of Xena: Warrior Princess, Timothy Omundson (a.k.a. Carlton Lassiter) played a prophet named Eli.

Margaret, Tom was even harsher than "“Usually it’s a hard decision to send someone home, but tonight it was easy." He said "tonight, you made it easy."

I love her so much.

Maybe I was overthinking it, but I got that the "that kinda worked out" included Dasher (Claire) and Dancer (Mitchell) in addition to Prancer and Vixen.

I understand why they do new numbers for sectionals/regionals/nationals from a production point of view, but I wish they would at least make some attempt to explain why they're learning new songs a week before the competition. When we competed for choir in middle school and high school, we had practiced our songs for

You have convinced me to watch this show. Damnit.

So someone killed their father so they can do something to their mother?

What I meant was that she'll get signed post-show and be forced upon us though she never defined herself as anything other than a kick-ass early 90s style belter.

If Melanie somehow decides to start embracing her island flavor in her music choices, she might be able to have an impact.

Leslie sure does enjoy getting confessions of love on the record.

No, Leslie just wanted to wave his decapitated head on a stick in front of his weeping mother. Not quite as psychotic, right?

I don't know which makes Rowan a worse reviewer: the fact that he didn't know it was Benny Hill or the fact that he mistakenly said Roger was "dissected." As you gents have noted, Roger was vivisected.

And the most offensive thing? Putting in a 20 and pulling out a 10, a 5, and five 1s.

Oh, I'd almost forgotten about the two of them and Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf. It's amazing how the two of them turn the improv tenet of saying yes into a weapon.

Is cultured the new PC term for "not black"?

As a half-Asian, half-white gay male with a female white-turned-black-for-a-day comic book avatar, I am indifferent to Tyler Perry's shows and films.

Us Asian-Americans don't have anyone pioneering sitcoms.