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cobbljock
avclub-39ba25521d96f21b19dda29f55845829--disqus

Is it just me, or does anyone else think that Ernesto hearing that tape was part of Chuck's plan? I just assumed it was, from the the way he smirked and flipped that tool in his hand after Ernesto left, but Donna Bowman didn't seem to think so. Just wondering if anyone else saw it that way, and if they did, whether

Agreed. I've seen him in some other smaller comedic roles, but never found to be funny enough to be memorable (though he was decent). Here, I find myself cracking up constantly at lines that really aren't that funny, but his delivery is great.

Did anyone else think that Gary the realtor was named as such to be a little nod to Justified?

Rural/backwoods setting? Mag(gie) Bennett? And Sam Elliott? Really?

Is Robert Quarles actually gay? I understood his "penchant for tooling up male hustlers" as just an angry response to his Dad having prostituted him out as a child. Is there any indication that he has sex with them (as opposed to just tying them up and beating the shit out of them), or that his family life is a sham

Did it bother anyone else that Raylan's story about Arlo and the mining equipment requires a fair amount of thinking to avoid being a continuity problem? In the pilot, Boyd asks Raylan if he remembers the scam Arlo had going in the early '90s where he would steal mining equipment and sell it to the Columbians, and

Hmm…I didn't think to factor that in. Personally, I wouldn't, since not every regularly reviewed show gets a season grade, at least to my knowledge. The original poster specified every "episode grade," so in that sense Dexter wouldn't qualify.

That was quite an interesting observation, so I had to double-check it. Unfortunately, it looks like "Dexter" is lacking the "D-" it needs to take that particular trophy. Season 3 of "Glee" checks out though, as Todd said.

I just posted, and I totally agree. It was great stuff for an ordinary comedian, but this was nowhere near the typical Louis CK quality. I was very disappointed. This special should have been given a B- grade, I think.

Wow. I'm a huge fan of Louis C.K., and I even defended his increasingly-bizarre-but-not-that-funny third season. But this stand-up makes me think he has hit his peak in the worst way possible. I laughed myself to tears watching his old stand-up, but this special felt labored, uninspired, and forced. I think he hit his

I'm just assuming Colt has some personal end-game that doesn't involve Boyd or orders from Boyd. Remember at the beginning of "The Hatchet Tour" when the policeman at the scene tells Tim that Mark was shot in the chest, and then crawled to his cell phone to text Tim "Bagram, "when the "previously on" clearly shows

The officer on the scene did mention that he had been shot in the chest, and used his last, dying breath to text "Bagram." I could buy that he did it while he was hiding in the bathroom if they didn't specifically say it was the last thing he did, bloodily crawling across the floor for the phone. I'm hoping this gets

I'm a bit confused: didn't Colt shoot Mark in the head? Then how did he have time to text "Bagram" to Tim? I know they said he was shot in the chest, but I just rewatched "Outlaw" and it looks pretty clear Colt shot Mark in the head.