avclub-4c7f61d9fd360230d1981473ace76c48--disqus
marklungo
avclub-4c7f61d9fd360230d1981473ace76c48--disqus

Of course I don't mind. Getting spammed in the middle of a discussion is what I'm concerned about. I don't know if the companies that advertise in these threads are legit or frauds, and it doesn't matter anyway. There's a proper place for ads, and it isn't here.

You make some great points, Abigail. If Elementary continues, I don't expect the mystery elements to go away (and how could they, when the main characters are Holmes and Watson?), but I hope they'll be executed better, while more attention is paid to character development.

The jaw-dropping callousness of the Doctor saving his screwdriver over the boy…

Send the spammer to Trenzalore, please!

I loved the show. I have nothing to add to the well-deserved praise Atamanuik is getting, so let me say that I found Peter Grosz hilarious in his brief Pence segments. There's an art to being that deliberately awkward.

Or Bernie Sanders voters in 2016.

Or better yet, bring either (or both) of them back!

Yes, but at least this time the murderer didn't escape scot free.

Someone should review Scorpion.

But remember, Fanny and Bob will certainly mention Felix's involvement at the trial—assuming there is a trial, of course.

"[The Belchers] genuinely care for each other, and the show genuinely cares for them…", which is the major reason why Bob's Burgers is so wonderful and its fans respond to it so much. Are you listening, Seth MacFarlane? It's not too late.

I thought we didn't get to see enough of the British family to fully understand why Stewie would want to go back to his old life.

For me, Roger is only funny if his antics don't really hurt anyone or he gets some kind of comeuppance. While I enjoyed this episode overall, at the end I just wanted to fucking kill Roger… and I wondered why Hayley didn't do just that. (Or for that matter, why Roger didn't kill Hayley if he didn't want to leave

It's not funny when FG does it either.

Which one was that?

People have been paying so much attention to the racism (real or imagined) in this episode that they (mostly) haven't noticed the sexism. Both Lois and Donna are portrayed as one-dimensional nagging bitches who get in the way of their husbands' fun until they reconcile because it's the end of the episode.

I've never been a fan of Seth MacFarlane's go-to running gag of
background characters getting killed for no reason with nobody reacting.
And between the sniper gags, the little boy implicitly getting killed
at the supermarket, and the Robin Thicke character going to hell for
something Roger did, I thought this episode

All these comments, and no one has mentioned that Gregson never appeared? This is the first episode in which one of the main four characters has been absent.

Am I the only one who thought the "sweaty Jew" line was a little nastier than it needed to be?

1. Did they announce that this was going to be a two-part episode? I certainly didn't know that when I tuned in, and when I realized it, I felt a little ripped off.