avclub-30c62029db762582675707eced5582c1--disqus
Pizawle
avclub-30c62029db762582675707eced5582c1--disqus

The protege betrayal was obvious as soon as he told him "not to care about anyone…"

What is it with these "reviews" (from the T.V. Club overall)? You guys just drone on and on and most of them are barely more than a plot synopsis. I just watched the bloody thing, why would I want to read it? Esp. badly written.

HBO does this frequently, though usually to their sitcoms. Not a big deal, regardless.

Was Kelsey Grammar's fourth wall breaking "I'm in Chinatown, baby!", a reference to anything? I found it hilarious because of the randomness but would like to know.

It gave me that King of the Hill feeling as well.

I found it charming.

"Who does he think he is, leaving me for a 20-year old? I'll show him. Get me a ten-year old".

I agree with you on that, brother.

Liz and Jack and the end scene with Kenneth seeing the ocean for the first time was all wonderful.

I understand that William H. Macy is a big name actor but he really throws the show off. They need to at the least, reduce his role, if not find some way to rid of him entirely.

This episode really got to me. Strong start to the latter side of the season.

It was an appropriate wrap-up to the season. I wonder where they will take the show from here. Hoping every season is something different. I would like the idea of the final scene as simply this horror finish, in which the terror is not really over but it never picks up on that.

So glad that it was not just me. Hilarious!

Gaines could still have been the mole.

Huge help, bruh.

Not sure if I will be back in 2012.

She plays herself well enough on a program she writes.

She nails it.

Genuine or not, it was a hilarious episode and Schmidt was awesome.

I feel cheated and deflated. No consequences to anything.