avclub-509b05cb166abe87bf5842642aa19a70--disqus
jrnydel
avclub-509b05cb166abe87bf5842642aa19a70--disqus

i hope you're being deadpan sarcastic (especially about the world 'real' there) but i'm not sure. they're both terrible people. i feel like it's possible that (what is, for me) the entire soul of the show is being missed by a lot of the viewers.

i replayed that line at least 10 times. buress's consistent & incredible delivery of the deadpanly facetious yet true-to-heart eludes analysis for me so far.

they're both horrible people #broadCityForever

this show's making me really happy that the types of parties i attend involve paper pencil & dice or local access networks

thank you, THAT's where i know her. she was fantastic in Other Space (but who wasn't).

There's just something about someone being alive one second and dead the next, it's like slapstick.

had the same thought

"Committee members who had voted to remove him then celebrated that they’d succeeded in keeping their hearing from getting too much unwanted attention or coming off as oppressive and underhanded."

tina's filibuster was one of my favorite moments. her character is only ostensibly bland / a safe snacking choice. there's been enough development that she doesn't have to look angry (or look any particular way at all) in order for her presence to speak volumes. a nice contrast to linda's outburst, which may have been

did not. thank you.

if paul rudd dies at the beginning and pffr's vanity card flashes at the end, you're guaranteed at least three seasons of inspired here's-what's-wrong-with-everything-that-is-not-this-on-television television. so get on renewing this already, adult swim. like, right hrrf.

as a male feminist software engineer & hacker, i found lisa's story tedious and homer's triumphant.

I'm reminded of the shared in-dream quote from Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, "Meet me in Jacksonville…" then when she explains how they're just going to drag each other into down a terrifying relationship sinkhole, he replies "So?" because he misses her. … Ash knows the fishing isn't going to be any good, but

It really bums me out when I find myself starting to find someone (Seth MacFarlane) tedious at the same time that it becomes fashionable to find someone tedious. I feel obligated to watch this when it premiers now, going into it with my intense inability to abide Family Guy multiplied by seeing a D- on AV Club

The backgrounds ARE gorgeous for Squidbees, and it's never even occurred to me that anyone thinks the characters are ugly (unless those people would say the same of Ren & Stimpy or, I don't know, The Scotsman from Samurai Jack) — and all y'all country arses better keep in mind that the show would be hard to focus on

Regarding that it's not necessarily inadvisable to derive a comedic proof-of-concept from the lives of dude-bro's, it's hard for Workaholics not to come to mind as a lovely example of the suggestion.

I just want sponsored content to be labeled as such. See the S06 episode of Community, which builds its plot around being an advertisement for Honda. If all those "Watch Jessica Jones or else you're not a feminist" ads here on AV Club said "Marvel/Netflix told us they're going in a feminist direction and described the