The 80s, man.
The 80s, man.
The sad thing is that Gore could have been a better candidate— he is intelligent and witty enough to be personable, but instead, for some bizarre reason, his campaign insisted on "drab, boring, and faceless" as his persona.
"NO! NO ONE HELP HIM!"
Hey, Fancy Pants, you weren't in this episode!
It could start out with a scene about Jimmy McGill, before he became Saul Goodman, but then it turns out that it's just the opening sketch of a Mr. Show episode.
"Berlin, 1945" is underrated. I also always enjoy a good MLK-Gandhi duel.
I always felt like Apples to Apples required more creativity, which made it more fun. The comedy was in making those connections, where in CAH everything is kinda spelled out for you already.
It's like I always say: It's a well-worn cliché / That real men don't eat quiche.
This kind of username/comment synergy made me check if this was a gimmick.
It's almost like early civilizations used religion as a method of instilling fear and keeping the populace under control!
The people who claim Christians don't resort to violence are just a confirmation of the cycle as to how white vs. non-white killers are treated in the media.
Hah, that's the same thing I noticed first
I don't think it's even close to the right call. I think it's really the wrong call. I think coaches do it because it's what they've always done.
I liked the fact that the crawl was gone from the bottom. More space for the game!
This was a weird episode: the payoffs to the stories had some good laughs, so the third act was funny, but the setup required SO much contrived Sitcom Stupidity that I was checking my watch until about halfway through the episode.
See also: Victor Fresco and Sean Saves the World.
Well, not anymore, anyway. These days they leave the killing to the anti-abortion activists.
Actually, if the rumors are to be believed, "Kemp: 11-6" would have been better.