avclub-52ed1f89cb6f846e8efba0e4eacf9c27--disqus
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avclub-52ed1f89cb6f846e8efba0e4eacf9c27--disqus

Look forward to the future South Park where Scalia is masturbating in Hell.

They killed her mic on the next song. Sweet.

Forever Evil is fucking goooood (Children of the Atom also maintains interest).

Speaking of Vertigo, the character's new direction sounds like an offshoot of Neil Gaiman's Sandman or something. Wonder if he'll get a junior partner with a heroin addiction (named 'Speedy, natch; those were the '70s.)

I remember people like Ebert saying "this movie will clear up the stuff JFK made unclear.' Joke on them.

Gee, you think Alien Jesus is dying to have someone interview him?

Huh? But your mother looked at least five years gone!

If you scan the article stream really fast it happily looks like "R.I.P. Tori Spelling and Jennie Garth."

Just like his dad.

Why couldn't Dave have brought out Mark David Chapman as a special walk-on to finish the job he started in '80?

Harry Dean Stanton's audiobook of the Kabballah.  Make it happen.

Also, Eddie Murphy's outrage scene is funny considering, when was the last time Rolling Stone had a black artist on the cover, other than Jay-Z in 2007 and some posthumous dirt on Whitney Houston?

Stanton's a modern miracle; how does a guy look sixty for nearly forty years straight (other than that guy who played Molly Ringwald's dad in Sixteen Candles)? 

What?! They filmed that Ghostbusters scene there?! Agh, ruined my NY vibe for the movie.

The same locations probably influences the stylistic debts.

And while things wrap up for Breaking Bad three hundred miles to the north, the Bridge continues the great tradition of bleak dramas set in the Southwest (courtesy a former writer of Homeland, a show that is suggestive of neither, go figure).

Well, whatever it is that goes east to west.

My great grandfather Alexei Bobrinskoy had a cameo talking to Bergman in   her 1958 film "Inn Of The Sixth Happiness," where she plays a missionary to China.  Was also the ambassador in Hitchcock's remake of "The Man Who Knew Too Much." Being a Russian aristocrat exile had its advantages.

There was one about an American female grad student in London who was a werewolf (ran it as a marathon on Sy Fy years ago), and the last episode before they pulled the plug was her on a transatlantic flight starting to transform as they crossed the international date line. Always wondered how'd they resolve it.

Yes, because the comments on the regular AV articles are incredibly adult and perceptive.