Rachel: "It was just a matter of time before someone had to leave the group. I always just assumed Phoebe would be the one to go."
Phoebe: "Hey!"
Rachel: "Honey, come on. You live far away. You're not related. You lift right out."
Rachel: "It was just a matter of time before someone had to leave the group. I always just assumed Phoebe would be the one to go."
Phoebe: "Hey!"
Rachel: "Honey, come on. You live far away. You're not related. You lift right out."
It is not. Maybe an answer, lyrically.
I can see what you mean, but I always took it more as him saying the person doesn't need and isn't helped by extra sympathy or pity from anyone. I think he identifies with the handicapped as "outsiders".
For example, how many "outdoor"-scenes there were that were actually filmed outdoors instead of on terrible looking soundstages.
"Oh, one fine day
"I've had my faced dragged in
15 miles of shit
And I did not
And I did not like it."
Hate to be that guy, but come on: that's like the most worn out insult towards "art with some ambition that I personally dislike" - I feel you should be able to spell it right.
I've rewatched the first season of Friends over the last two weeks and was surprised at how many things I did not remember, considering I also assumed I would know it by heart. I was also surprised at the quality, especially how much all the characters still acted like plausible human beings at that point.
Bryan Fuller also said on Twitter that we should just assume any food Hannibal serves is people.
Are there really any Disney movies that feature jews though? We can assume that stuff was going on offscreen without it being "historically inaccurate".
I think he was just curious to see how it would play out. Hannibal obviously likes Will but I imagine he would be disappointed rather than devastated if he were to end up dead.
Your "man card"? Your penis must have a very weird shape.
This reminds me of the time I saw Voxtrot open for… Jack Penate. (I didn't stick around)
You missed the "I guess he didn't hop fast enough"-bit?
Nail on the head. Him not being menacing was the whole point, just a brutal, boorish killer given delusions of grandeur by Chilton's manipulation.
The 7 inch single for Stand had an instrumental version of it listed under "The Elevent Untitled Song", so that's always been its title to me.
Yes, but it was very cliché for a perfect match like her to suddenly materialise at the moment Abed needed it to break out of his sitcom-ways of viewing romantic relationships.
I didn't know Larson before, but I thought her line readings were fairly poor tonight, sounded unnatural at times.
Also a very famous brand of cheap sausages in Belgium, so as 16-year olds we were all very amused back then: http://www.zwan.be
I can report it was played in my small Belgian town as well, so I'm guessing it isn't that rare. We called it "Bounce ball".