avclub-39717cca2267328b0d16d40c720dfd6c--disqus
funkl0rd
avclub-39717cca2267328b0d16d40c720dfd6c--disqus

Tina's diarrhea walk cycle was awesome.

And, so far, this show is using swearing so well. Naturally and for effect rather than, "We can make swears!"

Plus the old Linksys wireless router (which I can see from my seat in my pile of old parts (ok, junk pile)) as the head was a great touch.

This is not how I expected the inevitable Olyphant v Fillian face off to occur, but at least it happened. Now just bring in some Garret Dillahunt to complete the triangular circle.

Ok, I didn't mind too much that James Baxter was given a backstory and what happened. But my memory of his original appearance wasn't that he was there to be happy that he was making others happy. Instead it was that others were happy because he was so happy. For me he was a character who didn't need to find his

So cousin-lovers are frowned upon? Even in caves? And so these credit miles collected with so many impulse purchases are even dirtier than the felt at the time.

This was a really nice go at the cool v. disaffected dynamic with a bit of generational stuff tossed in, but, yeah, those braces on the bunny buckteeth was pretty much the highlight of the episode.

At a certain point a bit past midway of the episode all I could think about was that this might have made a neat video game in 1999.

Unlike Better Off Ted, which was heavily advertised as a boring ABC-style romantic comedy of that era, at least the info on this show lets us know before airing/streaming/binging/mainlining that Fresco is involved.

As a goodly and gentle fat man is it safe for me to mention that the size of Craig Robinson was a bit startling?

In this very AV Club.

Nowadays whenever I see Marino playing one of his affable idiots I always think that he is also the source of this quote from the little oral history of the "monkey torture" sketch:

On one side, Plaza and Shawkat are just great performers in this series. However while I caught the rote sense of fun of women playing the roles of especially famous men, there was also the explicitly thing stated in the episode that these were at their heart high schoolish issues. You know. The slap-fighty things

Well shit. Now I gotta watch this thing.

I've had a fascination with the Fox sisters story for a long time, so was happy they were to be featured. Due to that, I was a little disappointed in the telling. Though that disappointment is pretty stupid when I realize that they only had some 5 minutes on it. Anyway, they'd make a great movie or a really lousy

The speechifying about hope and such drifted a bit towards the version of Katara in the "Ember Island Players" which is a little worrying.

This was better than the first episode of the season thanks to Hill's energy and Sidibe's work with the scatting/singing, but it still seems to have the problem that showed up last year where the tellers are clearly trying to produce the re-enactments in their storytelling. They are trying to create the moments that

In the Bellevue/Redmond area in 1999 during the late dot-com era, teriyaki was the official lunch for just about everyone in the places I worked. We had long arguments about which was best or which was hottest. But it was always some mix on that chicken, the mound of rice (usually white at the places I went to), and

It was the wingsuit for me. The race across the car tops was funny enough as a rooftop replace. I was trying hard to guess the button, but the wingsuit was even more than I expected.

I went to start watching the recording of this episode and just couldn't start it. So from the Logue connection I fired up "Terriers" for the first time in years. And all that did was make me more depressed at how good it was, and how gone it is.