avclub-3ace65196976c11850236932fc33bc9b--disqus
SnarfsIsGross
avclub-3ace65196976c11850236932fc33bc9b--disqus

That Fake ID was wayyy better than my first one (Alvarado, what's up). Liked the letterman crack - kind of reminds me when I used to buy 40s during Friday lunch in my school uniform. The good ole days…

I thought that was a missed opportunity to do a parody of "The New Work Out Plan" from Kanye's first album

I really, really wanted for them to show their verision of the pre-photoshopped infamous "selfie" of Kim Kardashian posing in her one piece bathing suit with her gigantic ass. Or just shown a "real-life" version of her.

What's crazy is she wouldn't even have to sign away her rights to her name to be sued for using her name. Under Federal Trademark Law, Desautels would own the name and would be able to prevent Jeanette (or anyone else) from opening a restaurant with the same name if they could prove "a likelihood of confusion" to the

None of these books appear that interesting to me. Can anyone recommend some good, lesser-known American fiction from the last 10-15 years? Have a week off over xmas and some time to knock out a book or two.

Late to the party here, since I was away for Thanksgiving and didn't see the episode until last night - but I completely disagree that Collin was made out to be a huge douchebag.

Why is the AV Club not reviewing "Jam'ie: Private School Girl". I DVRd Getting On and plan to watch it, but I swore off all medical/hospital shows, as they seem to repeat themselves regardless of genre.

Use assuages once in a review and I'll think you're intelligent. Use assuages twice in a review and I'll think you're an asshole.

Modern Family was good for maybe a season, then it got reallll tired. Also, children, babies, and unwanted pregnancies spark interest for 3 or 4 episodes, but then it's just a crutch on the situations characters can be ut in and a huge f***king headache for writers to deal with. Examples: Dexter - Was interesting to

Good call. I didn't grow up in PV (grandparents live there though), but I grew up in a affluent area of LA. I also grew up comfortable, but without exorbitant wealth. My friend's parent's growing up generally fell into 2 categories:
1) Lawyers/Doctors/Accountants who worked a zillion hours a week; or 2) Former rich

Not sure how this is going to develop for the rest of the season, but to this point, I think it is very well done how Collin isn't an overt dickhead, existing merely to destroy Jenna's world.

Are you allowed to share that ending?

I can't tell if you are serious or if you are doing a satire of an obnoxious film student's term paper.

Lost me there, David Lynch is visually masterful, but empty when it comes to plot/writing/meaning. I think his fan's projection of what he's saying is actually far deeper than what he's actually saying.

You'd be surprised what two children and years with a woman can do to her ability to make you cum in your pants.

They were sitting next to my friend, when a bunch of us were on a plane. I had no idea who they were, but I thought it was so amazing that I took a picture.

On Fox? Not to be a TV snob, but I'll pass,

Andy Greenwald is probably the best pop-culture/entertainment writer in the business. Sorry, AV-Club.

An agent would never know how to correctly say "whom", pretty sure he said "who."

Think it was pretty obvious that it was not God that spoke to Kyle. He needed to construct a reason for him to tolerate the pain he was going through, so he made himself a martyr. He was at a breaking point, so it was his own vanity and self-satisfaction that allowed him to persevere. I liked the specific symbolism of