Quick question: is it a cultural thing to call people (Russians in this case) by their full name? Why is he "Arkady Ivanovich" in all the discussions and not Arkady, Mr. Ivanovich, Kady, Arkie, etc?
Quick question: is it a cultural thing to call people (Russians in this case) by their full name? Why is he "Arkady Ivanovich" in all the discussions and not Arkady, Mr. Ivanovich, Kady, Arkie, etc?
I don't think it's just to please him. I can't see any guy not thinking she was a babe when she first started on Glee, and I know his fans seem to think she's crazy hot as well.
I agree.
I don't see how. The time commitment is what limited her to a few episodes, but my understanding was that they could have used her as a star in those few episodes if they wanted.
I actually thought Will's fake-cry during the final speech was even worse. And he's delivered in many key acting moments over the show's run.
One of the lessons from this episode is that many of the people clamoring for "Glee" to return to the "good old days" were embracing the show for the wrong reasons.
The Will/April argument was poorly constructed. If they wanted to blame everything on April's lack of responsibility, why did they throw in that line about Will incompetently wasting all the club's money for his own amusement?
Marley had really pretty eyes…
I can't comprehend Naya Rivera's look changes at all. She's gotten all sorts of surgery to her face, has changed her hair color (she looks even worse with blonde hair on red carpets) and seems to have gotten a new boob job. I get that she's dating a rapper and is trying to project a maturer, non-Glee image, but the…
One of my favorite episodes. Even Chelsea Peretti brought some major, unassisted laughs ("Death of a triplet…that one you can use twice")
"The show’s thrilling city council plot continues with Norma meeting a guy who knows everything goes straight to the top! He’s played by Michael O’Neill, so I look forward to seeing more of him."
During one episode, Blauman, fed up with the other character from Barney's legal department (Bilson, played by Bryan Callen), quits GNB. He tries to pee during a board meeting but can't go in front of the crowd.
Really wish the show would be a bit more metaphorical with its "horror."
There's a difference between saying a character has psychological issues and saying an episode is deeply psychological.
*Not sure what you mean about the Taylor Swift joke not being related to her string of boyfriends. The punchline was that the cake, the subject of Taylor Not-So-Swift's song, cracked that he had only been on two dates with TNSS.
My bad - I feel like I always see Tyreese cradling her.
What was deeply psychological about this?
The episode just got an A- last week.
According to Hardwick, she was in one of the backpacks.
"I don't get this hang-up over taboos being broken."