avclub-230e46d19fe78a6c8dc715659a7188d7--disqus
Malingerer
avclub-230e46d19fe78a6c8dc715659a7188d7--disqus

Come to Wisconsin.  They're plentiful at Farm and Fleet.

Man, go into a hardware store and find a 3/4-inch drive socket wrench.  I stood in Sears one time, holding that thing, feeling like a hobbit.  I can't find a picture of one that shows scale, but here's a picture of one of the sockets, being held, apparently, Ozymandias from Watchmen:

I must still be hungry, despite flautas for lunch, because I read that as hot dogs not having sweat glands, and was about to argue with you that they're in there somewhere!

That one isn't finished, yet.  Maybe they should try a Kickstarter thing for it!

Liked for the authenticity of the Waffle House.

I had to look closely to see that her lapel pin apparently was not a shamrock or harp.

I think the way they revealed the assassination was great, because it grew out of the dementia storyline they had been nurturing all through the episode.  The actual event did happen in the wee hours of the morning, Eastern Time, so Mother Campbell waking Pete up with the news, and his sleepy misunderstanding that she

I've been really bored with Don Draper the last couple of seasons, too, mostly because of that lack of change you mention (although, in fairness, I think that's deliberate on the show's part, making his static nature more and more problematic for him as society around him changes so drastically), and because almost

Don's "post-breakup coping" could finally make him interesting again.  The scene where he plopped down during the creative meeting and everything ground to a halt felt a lot like my experience watching him in most episodes for the last two seasons.  During lots of Don scenes, I've been impatient for them to get back

That's a good point, @avclub-ea091ca6d4f474a765f3777597b384f8:disqus .  Then again, someone around here (I don't know who, because despite archiving all our responses, Disqus doesn't make a search function of comments available to us) once said that Jon Hamm nails the character perfectly because while he can be the

@avclub-705562aaa4a5b85bfa44373d8e6bf234:disqus , "You can't fake the kind of relief she showed in the scenes after the emergency room."

In fairness to Pete's mother, I'm an Irish-American, and even I would stay off the streets on St. Patrick's Day in NYC or Boston (I've been out on March 17th in Chicago several times, and that was plenty).

That's true, @avclub-6beb5f589a9fd04c21fcd50db3d9c80c:disqus , you can't put a price on happiness.  If you love what you do every day, that's really rare, and it would be difficult to walk away from.  A good boss is even harder to find.  My current boss is great, and is easily the best person I've ever worked for; and

If Canadians actually pay for things with dollar and 2-dollar coins, then they'll probably survive.

Well, if it's any consolation, I didn't notice a single bookstore when I was there.  Progress?

That's me, in a nutshell, too, except that I'm coasting by on student loan forbearances.  If they make me start paying those back, then I guess we'll have to live in my car, 'cause we can't pay rent and student loans on what I make.

@avclub-e3f5ab7f02122f95b801e13e2c586d6a:disqus  it also takes great pride in separating poor people from having healthy bodies.

Hey, they were both in Bonnie and Clyde, weren't they?  Did they have any scenes together?

@bcfred:disqus , I will say, though, that he got a bigger laugh from me than any character other than Karen, when he was talking with Will (I think), Grace would interject every now and then, but no one would acknowledge what she was saying.  Finally, Wilder pointed at Grace and said, with that spaced-out look of his,

Oh, absolutely, and that was the point I was trying to make: currently having a job allowed me the luxury of contemplating not taking another job, even if it were offered to me, because it didn't "feel like the best fit."  I thought that shit was only for rich people.  Turns out, any shit-kicker with a job can feel