Implied, @avclub-d70acaef961fb5432b331287c0add155:disqus , or implode?
Implied, @avclub-d70acaef961fb5432b331287c0add155:disqus , or implode?
@avclub-14118b537d7c2887df052a1464f9385a:disqus : "Don't forget Dutch and Nancy."
I disagree, and say that the duel (or whatever the correct term is for two-on-one light-saber combat) at the end of Phantom Menace rescued that movie from being an absolute disaster. Attack of the Clones had no such redeeming quality, and was truly one of the worst movies I've ever sat through.
I see what you mean.
I was thinking the same thing, but with Arrested Development, since it went to a streaming site instead of back to TV.
I was really surprised when Indianapolis let him go.
Oh, like bringing people or an entire show back from the dead would be any kind of narrative problem!
That's the one with Larry the Cable Guy and a few other rednecks, sittin' around a big spitoon, right? Didn't they add a "Red Man" so it wouldn't be all-white?
"Whatchoo gonna do, brother, when Hulkamania comes for youuuuuuu?"
It's funny that the article mentions Futurama as a model these shows are following, when Arrested Development would seem like the obvious one.
I'm eagerly waiting for Don Draper in the Season 7 opener with longer, un-Bryl-Creamed hair.
One of my best friends used that phrase a lot. He was the first person I heard say it, and I figured he picked it up from his father (as people do).
@avclub-782066c88e9c574d6085f3ddfc7032e4:disqus , that's Mrs. Dyckman Campbell Colón.
"Gimmie Shelter" — 10-to-1 (probably too cliched for Mad Men, but it depends on how they've set it up)
Here's what I predict re: Bob Benson. Now that Pete is off Chevy and going to "Siberia" with Ted, Don is out of the picture, Cutler and Cooper like Bob, and Joan has taken a personal shine to him, Bob has only one person standing in his way as a self-asserted obstacle: Roger. Bob will do something to get Roger out…
It was more like overalls, though, wasn't it? And loud! Ladies and gentlemen, the 1970s arrived early at SC&P.
It just struck me that Don totally stole Peggy's idea for the Heinz pitch — using the product's existing, iconic label alone as the graphic — for his Hershey's pitch. So, maybe having Peggy in charge in 1969 would pretty much be like having Don in charge, since he would just steal her ideas, anyway. Except that they…
Similarly to how Maison Derriere was always in good repair.
Yeah, this happens all the time. In some ways our institutions encourage this. My high-school girlfriend, for example, had divorced parents. She lived with her mother, hardly ever saw her father. Her mother was a nurse, so she made alright money, but nothing outstanding. I imagine their household income was about…
And on peyote, apparently.