avclub-39df51c015ce671b473b8cf5a306d217--disqus
buttermoths
avclub-39df51c015ce671b473b8cf5a306d217--disqus

I interpreted it to mean that Chevy was in Atlas Shrugged. Which I could believe, considering what an asshole he is.

He also produced the spoof of said show, the 4/20 telethon: Jamie Kennedy's America: A Nation of Farts.

I know it's an unpopular opinion, but MacGruber is awesome and Kilmer is STACKED in it.

"The Nostalgia Critic spent $200,000 for a studio just for his crap
series called Demo Reel which is cancelled after 4 episodes, whereas Red Letter Media spent just a around $500 to $1500 just for an episode of Half in the Bag."

"Appropriate recognition is how he puts food on the table": I thought Al exclusively puts his food into his songs?

I don't know, I've not been able to get into this record yet. It's definitely better than Anonymous, but most of it just sounds little too much like standard 90's hard rock; a sound I've never associated with Tomahawk. I wish it had more of the surreal road trip David Lynch-vibe of the debut, or at least the insanity

The Dark Pope has an endless stable of supple young wards at his disposal.

Yes…my nose… *shifts eyes, crosses legs*

My only complaint is that the relic should've been a silver lobster.

This is uncanny, as soon as she got in that mesh top I said to my girlfriend "I bet the next episode is just one long, uncut extreme closeup of Hannah's sphincter".

Sweden, the country of Snygg passning and Fint skott. I'm from Norway, we had the same cover.

Ni ska ta mina snygga skott i ansiktet och GILLA det, jävlar!

I remember that, and I guess it's not as if that gang couldn't have made something hilarious with that premise back then. But the podcast version really wasn't great. I guess what I'm most surprised about was that he played it at all.

He does come across as surprisingly surly, even for a middle-aged comedian, in his podcast appearances. I too love him for it, of course.

Echoing the sentiment that you should stick with it, perhaps sample some of the later seasons. I didn't really get the hullabaloo either at first, and that first season IS pretty shaky…but at some point the show and me just clicked, and now it is my favorite sketch comedy show of all time.

I remember being so jazzed when I saw the extended trailer with the "Ghostbusters"-sequence in full, and being so disappointed when it turned out that was literally 90% of what we saw of sweded films in the feature itself.

Same. A friend of mine had to work quite hard to convince me to watch it with him (he'd already seen it once); my distaste was obviously fueled by the Paul Walker presence and the horrible DVD cover: http://cdn.chud.com/5/51/51… (Also, what the hell is up with that stamp? "Approved by the master: Quentin Tarantino:

God, the force of that glare in this sketch seems to melt the glue straight off his already-crappy bald cap.

The podcast episode in question is from 2009, but it's not as if this isn't a concept that more than one person could arrive at individually. It's ripe for parody. RIPE. The real question is why a Funny or Die short or whatever hasn't been made from this.

@persia2:disqus Yep, except for the addition of the Curb theme, the scene plays out exactly as shown here.