Will do, thanks.
Will do, thanks.
I've actually just started watching Firefly, and I wouldn't mind having a TV Club Classic set of recaps to read/discuss along with.
Alan Sepinwall has written recaps of the entire series, one set for new viewers and another for people who've seen it before:
Great, great book.
Gotta admire Superman for his strong moral stand against cousin-marrying.
Seriously? Better than the top-notch Russian cursing from Svetlana? Or Tony's response to Melfi telling him about Proust: "This sounds very gay."
Whoops, timestamped.
*SPOILERS*
Funniest AJ moment comes later on in this season, when we discover he literally doesn't know what a gutter is.
My top five Bowie albums:
Mine would be Tintin.
I watched the first episode of Luther
And it was absolutely terrible - really shoddy, lazy, and poorly-written. I know that American TV produces a large amount of crap, but it's just embarrassing when I hear people in the British TV industry claim that stuff like Luther is an example of "quality programming".
I got the first issue, but missed the subsequent ones. Which is a shame, because I really like Greg Rucka doing genre/crime stuff.
Yeah, it's a good introduction to the Feds - they're "the antagonists" (as much as we're rooting for Tony and his crew), but they still shoot the shit and crack lame jokes.
I can definitely draw a connection between the montage at the end of "Funhouse" and the musical montages at the end of each season of The Wire (especially Season 2) - the game goes on.
SPOILERS:
Netflix App: The Movie?
Not before A.V. Club Film App: The Movie.
Silly A.V. Club
Don't you know that all un-friending is by default dramatic?
I got into them (I suspect like a lot of other people) through the Replacements, and they're a great band in their own right. You can see their influence in a lot of guitar-pop since.
Yeah, it always seems Tony has regular street smarts plus a certain measure of curiosity - as dismissive as he is of Melfi's interpretations, he'll always push against them and be prompted to offer his own thoughts. It comes up enough times in his conversations with his kids - that college "wasn't for him", but he…