I've never watched that show, but if there was a chance that it would take Annet Mahendru away from "The Americans", I'm glad it got cancelled.
I've never watched that show, but if there was a chance that it would take Annet Mahendru away from "The Americans", I'm glad it got cancelled.
That…is not a serious blemish.
I agree, I don't think it's such a terrible thing that Don went back to wor and created the Coke ad. He's an ad man, it's what he does. He's good at it. It felt to me like he'd finally found the inner peace he's been looking for. He went back to New York and back to work, feeling better about himself after an…
other than all the evidence that's been described in great detail
Yeah, but they showed the sun over the water. Which it should not be doing at 6 am, not in California, not unless the earth turned in the other direction back then.
Yeah, you're both very wrong.
Yes.
Yes, the only way they could have made it more clear would have been to include an annoying epilogue with Don actually making the pitch in New York.
I don't think this is a "fade to black" moment because there's nothing to debate. It's screamingly obvious that he wrote the ad.
More like 99.9%. I think there is nothing people not in the know care less about than accents.
There are dumb people who think one dialect can be superior to another dialect.
It is odd, how many British people we have packing our TV shows and movies. I remember when Renee Zellwegger got pegged to play Bridget Jones and people in England freaked.
You don't expect SNL to book performers who can actually sing, do you?
I don't remember this at all.
Leslie Jones is the worst sketch performer on the history of this show. Take all the performers nobody liked, the Victoria Jacksons and whatnot, at least they could read cue cards and deliver lines.
I was going to post the exact same thing. If both black women left the show, the Twitter shitstorm would be unimaginable, because, as we know, the lack of a black woman on "Saturday Night Live" is the great social injustice of our day. When they were forced to hire Zamata it was easy to assume that she had a…
He knows! He knows! Abraham's dad knows!
They were after November 1942, but I think that's after the time frame of the movie.
So, the book wasn't any good? How was that mystery novel that Rowling wrote under a pseudonym?
Wait, we're not allowed to discuss the end of "Don't Look Now" in an article about "Don't Look Now"? We can't discuss the ending to a 42-year-old movie in an article about that movie?