I only did it up until I was about to go into high school, or so. Netflix Instant basically made the thought of it pointless, but that does mean I first saw Alien and Halloween on AMC. Don't think they were censored, though.
I only did it up until I was about to go into high school, or so. Netflix Instant basically made the thought of it pointless, but that does mean I first saw Alien and Halloween on AMC. Don't think they were censored, though.
Well, that makes sense. I wasn't as fond of the first season as I am of the rest of the show. I assure you that it definitely improves and becomes far more ambitious over time. The first two episodes of season 2 are already a huge step forward from even the best season 1 episodes, like Rainy Day Daydream.
Adventure Time is much more than that. It was arguably like that and just that only for its first season. I love Spongebob, it's a masterpiece of animated comedy, but Adventure Time has a rich, complex universe, fascinating characters, and frequently experiments with its style and structure to often fantastic result.
Yeah, I'm still regretting that Khal Drogo held out for too much money and didn't get to be Drax, but it otherwise looks very promising.
Well, I don't remember my experience with the episode last summer well enough to talk about those, my major issue when I first saw it and considered it the worst episode of the show thus far (and possibly still, or at least one of the weakest) was that Joan and Roger didn't entirely work for me as characters yet. Joan…
Oh, Dead Like Me. .
Yeah, Fiona's departure is definitely the problem, but considering that the two have been happily together since meeting on the show, it's likely that their departure would have to be together.
Yeah, I've been veering between love and hate with it for a long time, and I very nearly quit it after some repulsive events/storylines in season three, but then the show managed to have the best two episodes it had ever done with its last two. It has generally kept up the improvement in quality since, at least so far.
And I always thought that took away whatever value the British series had. I didn't like it much anyway, but those two leaving so quickly was clearly a mistake, nine more series later.
I meant too late. I hated him from the beginning of season 2 on as well, although it got even worse in season 3. What I meant was that they had a logical way to kill him off back at the end of season 2 (if Marco had died on the way to America, which easily could've happened, and Estefania had her dad kill him) and…
There's really no question that he's dead, between the way it's executed in the last two episodes (although yes, it's not shown on screen) the actor's departure, and the numerous declarations by people from the show that he is dead.
I haven't caught up, but where I left off, he was conning his daughter into donating part of hers without knowing he's her father.
The series has gotten significantly better since then, and one of the ongoing storylines right now is Frank having to try to slowly wean himself off alcoholism and replace his liver, or else he will die.
HERE BE SPOILERS FOR SHAMELESS, US, SEASON 3
Well, there you go. I thought Rick and Morty's storyline in Meeseeks was fantastic and that the A-plot of Lawnmower Dog was only pretty good. We're a diverse group of fans.
I'm of the house that considers HoC to be utterly terrible.
Derek I'll give you, but Lilyhammer is at least decently thought of from my understanding, better than Hemlock Grove at any rate.
Well, I guess that'd be good enough for me.
You got crabs, ass-face!
"THOSE GUYS ARE INSIDE YOU BUILDING A PIECE OF SHIT, ETHAN! They're inside you building a monument to compromise! Fuck em'. Fuck these people. Fuck this whole thing, Ethan."