Writing an article about whether you should watch a show live or experience it in blocks is really hard. As can be seen by the above.
Writing an article about whether you should watch a show live or experience it in blocks is really hard. As can be seen by the above.
People who like plot watch the show like this!
People who like characters watch the show like THIS!
Doo-dee-doo-doo-doooo!
A lot of the fangirls of this show are pretending to be mad that he already appeared on the show or that he isn't a redhead or a minority or a woman or whatever but their real problem is that he isn't a cute pixie-ish boy who they can daydream will take them away from their emo world of sadness and being misunderstood.
This is a C film. A really decent story with a runtime ridiculously long and an unnecessarily huge budget.
I wanted Batman to be like this forever: Bruce Wayne globe-trotting and doing near-Silver Age adventure stuff with Dick Grayson and Damien Wayne back in Gotham fighting crime in perhaps the most original Batman/Robin team-up since the original. It was just great and I'm sorry it's gone.
I tend to disregard people who say a joke was done better on Bring It On.
I have a perfect streak of not liking the people who go out of their way to hate a song. Even Posehn has dipped in my view now.
Huh. Wrong column.
Dang. You were all up on that show. I only remember the one episode. And in the dearth of comic book-like shows in the mid-80s, I-Man was a refuge for geeks like myself. Kids nowadays don't know how lucky they are!
It was indeed. Bakula was a guy who had spontaneous healing powers.
Scott Bakula will always be I-Man to me. A show I wanted them to pick up when I was a kid.
Define "failed". Twenty-one episodes in the pre-Joss Whedon era for a super hero show is phenomenal.
Would you say that Sava personally enjoys this episode beyond what his criticism admits to?
Or maybe Iron Man 3 broke crazy box office records and people tend to have a short memory.
It only takes one.
AV Club sure wants to characterize this summer's blockbusters as weak. Maybe the employment turnover on this site has something to do with that.
So by "Here are the Breaking Bad secrets you won’t hear in the final eight episodes," what you meant to say was "Here are NONE OF the Breaking Bad secrets you won’t hear in the final eight episodes."
You mention the "grieving for a loved one" out of hand, but that scene is POWERFUL! And it more than sets up Cagney's actions in the famous ending. Look at the way he goes nuts!
Magical alien fuzzy cute annoying plush doll sidekick comic relief character played by Frank Welker.