avclub-2e4c0fffc8488719169ae93b5c17b66e--disqus
InspectorSpacetime
avclub-2e4c0fffc8488719169ae93b5c17b66e--disqus

The question isn't how many episodes, but *when* many episodes.

She's gotta do something to make up for all those people's hearts who explode on her.

Eli in the band was pretty decent last week. Less window time is better, though.

"That's not very Korean"
"Christian"
"What did I say?"

Arigato, HeeeEEeey

June was an investment banker a few weeks ago. There's no question as to whether or not she's a good person, that's just a facade. 

I appreciate that it didn't turn into something more abstract: watching Schmidt seriously try to push her away would be depressing—being mean to your girlfriend until she dumps you is not great television. He tried to send her back into the wild like she was a wolf (woof) and it was a great scene.

It's still Fox's top-rated live-action comedy. So I think it's at least safe for two more seasons. And three years of it might be enough. I only demand more for a great show.

The show works because of moments like this: none of them are surprised and delighted by her. They think she's crazy, tell her she's crazy, and life goes on.

In honor of our democratic traditions, my prom had a President and Vice President, and were not given crowns but rather had to swear to defend and protect the Promstitution.

I like Mary Tyler Moore too, but I think that would have been better still as a single-camera show. I'm not saying that Frasier was the only great multicamera show (though I can see how I typed that), I mean that it's the only one that was great *as* a multicamera show. It used the form rather than just assuming it

Frasier is the one truly great multicamera show. The others from that era would all have been substantially improved if they moved to a modern format - single camera Seinfeld would have been better than the original, for example. But Frasier belonged in that format.

That scene might have gotten the biggest laughs from me of anything this season. Start to finish.

….Connect four.

Which means we're only months away from Rye Junior High School's production of "Much Ado About Nothing," starring Sally Draper as Benedick, Glen Bishop as Beatrice, and George Michael Bluth as a stand-in for Glen Bishop. GLEN BISHOP!

Are they talkin' about the bordello?

Making fun of my sandals, that's a paddlin'.

And blinking his lights

Does Rihanna sample that "I've been everywhere" trucker song?

What's great about Community is that even when the episode doesn't hold together too well, the jokes are still really funny.