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edmund hillary clinton
avclub-2ac233bc53744593f485e5752aaa692a--disqus

But lots of us binge-viewed it the first time on DVDs.  I honestly just think that this season had more weak points re: jokes than other seasons.  Narratively it was pretty impressive, as TDVW says.

Honestly, I did not know this going in.  I try to avoid too much internet chatter about things I am really interested in (my friend who tried to tell me something about Cabin in the Woods as we were going to see it opening night still makes fun of me for yelling "YOU ALWAYS SPOIL EVERYTHING!!" at him).  So it really

But they have their own opinions!

I also thought they overdid the new side character.  Marky Bark eventually paid off for me  since I liked the Lindsay stuff more than most people seemed to, but I did not enjoy Debrie. 

I also thought she was one of the weak spots this season.

I thought so too for some reason, considering I'm not sure that I get it.

When you think about how Jessica Walter's facial expressions generate so many laughs on their own, it makes you realize how important the littlest facial movement is to comedy acting.  I think Portia is really funny, but her performance loses something by the frozen facial muscles.

@avclub-f7f8eb12e0f61a9321597157c0d61791:disqus you hit the nail on the head for me with this season.  MOST of these characters are best in small doses, so in general I did not like this season as much as the previous ones.  And they do best playing off each other and not characters I've never seen before.

That was so great, but I was getting so annoyed with the split screen during the choreography sessions since they kept pulling away from him.  My god, you have Tommy Tune, you better show him dancing!

I loved the short haircut!  I get overly distracted by actress' surgery/botox and while I hate to discuss it too much here, it does disrupt from the show.

@Scrawler2:disqus I agree about Barry Zuckercorn - aka Max Winkler!  I loved that cameo.

"Mentally adjusted" is a good way to put it.  I was frustrated at first that they seemed to do away with the best part of the show - the family interactions.  But once I saw how each episode unravelled and wove on top of previous episodes, I rather enjoyed it.  I agree with Todd that it was "bloated" rather than

I loved the shriek, but thought this follow-up really sold the scene.

Why?

Or people who are rude to you or inconvenience you.

For me it was the human cello, because I swear to you that I could feel the bow being drawn across my neck as he played it.  This show is so so vivid.

I had been thinking about spending a weekend at the beach around Christmas, but the opening scene is seriously making me reconsider.  This show seems to have a knack for transforming a potentially idyllic scene into the macabre without it seeming like a phony bait-and-switch.  This really is my favorite show right

No.  Tare is not inappropriate here, although I suspect that Chaff makes a better metaphor in this context.  Pills and Jellybeans was a complete misunderstanding of what was going on on-screen.

Andrews was 16 years older than Forrest, so it's easly not to make that connection (I didn't either).  You can definitely see the resemblance in that shot - it's like he's thinking about the ghost of Gene Tierney.

MY Dana Andrews, that's whose!