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Lovely Bones
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I actually (albeit indirectly) know someone that was convinced that Gliding Over All was the series finale. You know, being the kind of person that loves endings that suggest plenty more will happen after the story ends, a la I defend Carnivale's finale working as a series finale while wishing we had the other four

Agreed, but I'll miss Chris the most, still. That man makes me so fucking happy just by being who he is. Before I became emotionally invested in the cast as a whole, the show for me was watching a bunch of assholes be hilariously selfish to each other (yes, even after season one) and then Chris' sincerity and warmth

Now this is what happens when you royally screw up a 'final season episode' for a show like this. I'll grant that I laughed every once in a while, but this was still stale and poorly executed, even for a flimsy idea for a story. This was the opposite of The Simpsons' eighth season and Community's third.

I've been rooting for the idea of Leonard taking over the role, given that he's already in the same sort of antagonistic relationship with the group and that he's *Leonard*, but Fred Willard would be fine too.

I don't care about the Anchorman movie, but I'm just glad someone else is as looking forward to You're Next as I am. Been waiting two goddamn years for that thing.

It's sarcasm. Unless this is also sarcasm. Och, I'm bad at this.

What do I have to do with this?

I hear John Lennon occasionally and Michael Cera/Jesse Eisenberg much more often. Eh, could be worse.

I was introduced to it by my brother out of shared interest quite a while before I actually made an account. Sometime around Autumn of last year. I would've discovered it sooner if I had still been regularly reading the Onion, but I stopped following it for a while as the humour had started to get old for a while, I'd

There's a good chance you're right, I'll grant, but I'll say at the time it certainly felt like a perfect way to write him out. I, like I'm sure many others were, was convinced Ted had died in that sequence, and the combination of shock and incredible pity at that scene in Live Free or Die, after having resented him

Don't forget the part where he severely hurt his neck and is now paralyzed from the neck down. *Jesus* that was harsh.

That's basically already a thing, though.

@eric827:disqus It may be silly, but I'm sure it was a thought that was going through the minds of everyone in those lines of service at the time, especially the new recruits. The difference is that this is *Carrie* we're talking about. She wouldn't let go of it the way people in those agencies have at least tried to.

Ah, Estes. I'm going to miss him.

No, we all just wish he had. And last I heard, the beard is holding out for more money.

Let's have a game, shall we? What sentences can we create by inserting different words into those spoiler brackets while still remaining somewhat relevant to the show? I'm assuming something about Saul's Beard will be included very quickly. I hope I'm not disappointed.

I'm totally with you up until the Kamp Krusty part. Very good episode, but not nearly one of the best, for me at least. Especially when right after are Homer the Heretic and A Streetcar Named Marge.

DRC, man, you're reminding me how good of an opportunity they had with Nazir to expand on him as a character and how much that was completely wasted for the sake of him pulling this crazy 'my death is only the beginning' gambit.

Fair enough, Brody doesn't have anything in season two that's absolutely essential enough to warrant saying he needed to be kept around for the continuing Nazir storyline.

Nonsense, there was plenty of growth potential in the Nazir story, they just squandered it. The writers should've killed him in season 2. The entire season felt like it was building to that, the writers were running out of something interesting to do with him, and it would've perfectly solved the problem of them