"Well, a lot of people didn't make a lot of sense immediately after 9/11. Hopefully he has thought better of that sense then. "
"Well, a lot of people didn't make a lot of sense immediately after 9/11. Hopefully he has thought better of that sense then. "
The Terror was great, until it turned into a Neil Gaiman novel in the last 30 pages.
Er…
"Michael Hirschorn explains why we'll see more Leno and less Heroes in the future of American network television."
Don: I'd agree with you, except that they still haven't explained the part of the island mythology that deals with its effect on pregnant women. That's been a fairly major element since Season 3. Having one final pregnancy could be their way to deal with that.
I'm aware of that, but I think the show's operating in shorthand.
Going to go ahead and call it…
Kate's knocked up. Whoever took Aaron told her that to "replicate the original flight," she had to sleep with Jack and get pregnant, taking the Claire role (just as Locke is now Christian, Hurley is Charlie and Sayid is Kate). Hence the out-of-nowhere sex and the awkwardness that…
Syriana
If you're watching it as a thriller, you're doing it wrong.
@triceratops: True, and fitting in that "Singing in My Sleep" is all about mixtapes.
In Soviet Russia, Cokmedy laughs at you!
Agreed. The Comedy Central Roasts justify Jeff Ross's existence.
That might be my favorite McGinley scene of all time. Thanks, Nabin.
Actually, looking over his filmography, I'd extend his mid-period one starring vehicle in both directions, beginning with European Vacation in '85 and ending with Memoirs of an Invisible Man in '92.
Considering it was released in '88, I'd hardly consider Funny Farm part of Chase's "start." It's solidly mid-period Chase, which I would argue stretches from '85 (Spies Like Us) to '91 (Nothing But Trouble, which pretty much sealed the deal on his comedy career).
That would explain how the Black Rock ended up miles inland, as well.
For me, Crane Wife flags in the middle (everything from 'O Valencia' through 'Summersong' is, well, middling, to varying degrees), but the title tracks and 'The Island' are some of the best stuff they've recorded.
So, wait…
"And mess with it they do, usually much more heavily than on 'A Rake's Song'…"
Well…
"Kurt Busiek… noted that the problem for some comics fans might not be what Willingham wrote, but where he wrote it."
WE CAN NEVER GO BACK TO ARIZONA!
AlZheimers? Who even are you?