avclub-39f7dd002b8c98fa4bfc38631ca18303--disqus
Lazy Jellyfish
avclub-39f7dd002b8c98fa4bfc38631ca18303--disqus

And those huge *cups air in front of chest* tracts of land.

Not only did he quote the character he won for portraying, but he did it in character, too!

Best line of the night for me is a toss-up between Jill Soloway's "topple the patriarchy" or Rami Malek's "please tell me you're seeing this, too."

Me too! I devoured every episode in like a week. I was hooked after the theme song.

Angela was abducted, locked in a dimly lit room, urgently questioned by a child who looks vaguely like young version of her with bruising on her body that indicate abuse, and asked a series of absurd and sometimes deeply personal questions all presumably under the watch of some person or persons whose intentions

As one of the dozens (DOZENS) of people who actually watched Documentary Now! every week it was on last year, this, more than Mr. Robot or Game of Thrones, was the series I was most looking forward to returning this year.

Jesse, using his Genesis power, commands Tulip to kiss him. Romantic music swells, the camera swirls around the two. The kiss ends, the bewitchment fades, and Tulip punches Jesse. I love that while most other shows would celebrate that moment as sweet and romantic, with some justification like that she really wanted

His handling of questions about HBO's pervasive use of sexual violence in its dramas certainly does.

To my memory, Emilia Clarke's audition reel clip was more transfixing than anything she's done, or perhaps anything she's been given to do, on the show. I want more of that performance, and it's a shame the character doesn't require more of that sort of performance. Seriously, that's a great audition, and it makes me

I guess, it's that the burger has no buns (security).

Even as a kid watching Loony Tunes, I never laughed at Pepe Le Pew, nor was I the least bit amused. Those cartoons were too dark for me. I empathized way too much with the cat, getting that icky, trapped, panicked feeling whenever I realized the cartoon was a Pepe Le Pew cartoon. And that feeling amplified whenever

That's happened for me on my laptop browser for at least a year and a half, likely more. But it's just started happening for me on my mobile browser—just weeks after I commented that I was still able to view notifications on my phone.

I've been getting the same thing for at least a year, probably more. But I'm actually able to view notifications when I'm browsing on my phone (which I've only just discovered in a few months ago).

Absolutely, and that would be fascinating if the series takes that direction with Nas's family. But I hope Richard Price, et al didn't choose to approach this as criminal justice system misery porn. I haven't seen or read much of his stuff, but from what I have it seems that Price is great at wringing the humor out of

After every frustrating decision Nas made throughout the episode, I was so glad this pilot ended on a funny note. Beyond the excellent acting performances, particularly by Riz Ahmed, that last scene with Nas's dad grabbing his keys, running out of the house, stopping in the street in his sleepwear and realizing his

I don't know if anyone's mentioned this in past review comments, but I love the Bob's Burgers Burger of the Day quality of that church sign.

I wouldn't mind a Serial history season that examined the Levi Weeks trial. Henry Brockholst could be the "and Peggy" guy inserting himself into Hamilton and Burr's bits.

Late-90s e-tard raver me fucking loved the Go soundtrack as much as the movie.

I just asked Siri; it's reply was "To know the history, you need to do the math: R + L = J"

Ain't no party like a Lemon party!