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slightlynicepear
avclub-1f39c07c339a9fedf8bb275da9f19856--disqus

As someone who just got a job as a casual public school secretary and had to sign off to acknowledge a long list of activities we are not allowed to partake in with students (including not being alone with them one on one) what Hannah did was incredibly inappropriate. But that goes without saying really.

I am so glad that she has articulated this annoying trend in music today of the "Urban Rustic" Mumford and Sons type shit. My friend performed a show a few months ago and had a band she was friends with open for them and it was the most forgettable bland folky music with quirky girls playing fiddles, guys in

Please just cut to Clint Eastwood

That sketch where Stone plays the weird co-worker at a bridal shower is a great example of a game and talented host. A lesser one would have gone for the straight-man bride role. I wish more hosts were like her.

It's worth watching if you want to experience a rage stroke while also dying of boredom. Plus I had a soft spot for Marty until they brought him back in the last season, make him an awful person, and then immediately forget that he existed again.

My friend is currently showing Gilmore Girls to her boyfriend and every time we hang out it always turns into a discussion about how Logan is the absolute worst. I mean he doesn't even visit Stars Hollow until the fifth to last episode!

There's something about watching Hannah have her heart broken by Adam that I find oddly appealing in a schadenfreude way. I mean it could crash and burn as a storyline and make her more whiny and insufferable, but we also haven't seen her actually get dumped and maybe it will make her grow up a bit. That is a very

That's true, and I can't speak to his particular tastes, but this was the first that I'd heard him complain about violence in a movie, and other people agreed with him that they felt the violence was so excessive as to make them uncomfortable. I don't really know what they were expecting considering it's a movie about

I really want to do a compendium of every Best Supporting Actress winner who won for playing the wife of the main character.

She was about six when Selma happened, and we're Canadian so it's hard to say what kind of education she got about the Civil Rights movement, but I know what you mean. She was vehement about not being interested in seeing it though and I didn't even register that excuse as white guilt until reading this article.

It was weird how much of it was played for humour. Hell I laughed at parts but aside from helping win WWII and essentially creating computers, Turing had a pretty miserable life.

My mom and I got into an argument a couple weeks ago trying to pick a movie to see. She wanted to see The Imitation Game and I wanted to see Selma, but Selma "didn't interest her" and she actually said that it made her feel guilty what they went through and didn't want to see it.

When I was in university I had to write a paper about Catfish for a non-fiction narrative class. I forget the main points, but I think the basic argument was that it shouldn't be considered a documentary, but the TA said it was a moot point because it was labelled as such. I was probably a dumb undergrad but that

"Summer of 4 Ft. 2," is my favourite episode too! Probably because I have a fond memory of watching its first airing as a child and laughing really hard at "Sweet merciful crap! My car!"

Jane does have a quick line saying that Max and Penny are her "plus twos" for the wedding, but why Brooke is okay with that is hard to say.

I don't understand why more people don't blame CBS for the last season. In the eighth season you can tell they're ramping up to end it, and then CBS renews them again after they've painted themselves into a corner. Milioti was an amazing get for them, and her scenes are probably the only redeeming part of the season,

True, but with the voiceover explanation, the flashback and the split screen all rolled together it felt like it was talking down to the audience who didn't get the reference and also was a waste of time for people who did. Maybe I'm just too used to TV shows that rapidly spew out references and expect the audience to

Anybody else annoyed at how explicitly they explained that Cato reference?

I read a few of the responses to it, and they feel like the kind of annoying response you might get from someone when you hypothetically ask if you could live in a past decade, because unless you're a white male your life would pretty much suck anyway. Slavery was and is horrific, so I find it hard to believe that

Don't forget Buddy and Buddy Jr. If someone told me that kid was Brad Leland's son I would believe them, they look that similar.