avclub-56c31ac2be5439cea7e32c3e8468941c--disqus
AMVP
avclub-56c31ac2be5439cea7e32c3e8468941c--disqus

Transform and roll out!

I was actually hoping they'd allow Pierce to defend Greendale, considering his previous attachment to it. Then again, seeing as he's all about fitting in, it's understandable how he could be so quickly swayed. 

Would it be too over the top to see Abed pouring S.B.'s ashes into the engine to resurrect him?

You forgot Virtual Systems Analysis…

And could the person who rear-ended Starburns have been an inebriated Evil Shirley? 

I honestly enjoy the Chang stuff. Season two helped a lot with this, considering how crazy Chang was somewhat balanced with emotional Chang (the Shirley stuff in particular), so his more straight-up antics this season feel like a natural progression. What his character really needs is a redemption arc like Pierce got.

Thanks for those comforting words. Like the Dean with a warm glass of milk… "staring at you…"

I can buy it, especially considering how clearly they delineate his level of intelligence depending on the situation. This gag came at a relatively trivial moment, but in a pinch, Troy knows how to summon his focus.

Mind. Blown.

Just take the Hulu Plus free trial and catch up there.

I just assumed he was divorced , and his wife got the kid.

I just realized the most intriguing aspect of this episode: "The Greendale Seven". The whole scenario just begs to be followed up on, maybe even with a Facebook page? (I'm sure Britta would be pleased).

Meh, I'll agree that that whole bit felt rushed, though I deny any true fan to say they didn't well up at Troy telling Britta she's the best.

Interesting that the introduction of the Dean's magical costume closet (which the shadow Dean "came out of") is completely upstaged by that little tune. I guess there really isn't any going back after the "good news, bad news" dress.

A fairly old joke, but Donald completely sells it. The $7 tag was priceless.

Awesome how one of the best lines of the night played directly to Todd's critique of Britta's arc this season.

@avclub-7aee1b75b527e215f31e20a5c4e7a768:disqus  "We’ll turn the comments section into some weird Viking funeral pyre and set everything on fire."

Frasier is an interesting example of the 200 plus series that, I'd argue, stayed consistent to the end. Now I don't mean to say it was consistently great, or that there weren't its fair share of bad episodes, but the top-tier farcical scripting and genuine emotion where characters were concerned made this a beloved

Interestingly enough, one of my favorite anime, Bamboo Blade, worked exactly like that, and for the better, I'd say. Whereas the manga got sidetracked with tangents in later chapters, effectively crippling all its greatest strengths, the anime stuck by its characters through to the end (I assume, its actually one of

@avclub-eaff9f19dbfd5c5a5807b5dbfa656ec9:disqus Totally with you on the 12 Oz. Mouse front. The run of that show was so concise and gripping (that's right) that I can't image what it would have looked like had it gone on. Yes, there was clearly more to be explained (the cutting of season 2's length over halfway into