avclub-57ea21d48dc6a2e17d2f472597762c3c--disqus
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avclub-57ea21d48dc6a2e17d2f472597762c3c--disqus

I laughed for ten minutes, literally. I'm not being glib. My abs are in pain from the laughing.

Cool story, Frodo.

So, maybe the show is trying to criticize that male entitlement?

Two days later, and I'm still bothered about what Danny did. I mean, the setup was pretty obvious, we knew he was going to fix it. But what a lousy boyfriend move. If the Mindy Project is basically a televised rom-com, then it's failed the basic premise with this: I would never want to date a guy who didn't take

What do you use liquid nitrogen for that I would never know about?

Haha, are you kidding? This show is never above objectifying Padma. Remember when they did the roller derby thing and gave her the nickname "Padma Smacks Me?"

It's a restaurant in Beverly Hills. It's pretty good. I don't think he personally eats kosher, though. He just found a niche in a neighborhood that wanted it.

I think George looks a little bit like young David Krumholtz, on the early seasons of Numb3rs.

I still like and use my ipod classic. I like it when I'm driving because i don't really have to look at it to use the buttons, the way I would need to with a touch screen.

So this whole "do we turn Paige Commie" game has got me wondering: how have they not considered this before?

Haha, that's exactly how I feel. When I was thinking about season 2, I thought about so many awesome scenes and totally didn't remember that I hated the Jared dying thing.

So I know the right phrase if I'm ever in Australia. Cool, thanks!

I thought she was yelling to warn him.

I think she left him alive on purpose. She could have easily gotten a kill shot if she wanted one.

When did it become okay for people to say "good on you" instead of "good for you?"

She wasn't responsible for Tripp's death, though.

I continue to enjoy this show. I liked how they brought the Scooby Doo joke back around.

That "militarizing the furniture" gag felt like something one of the writers saw in real life, then thought it would be funny to put on tv. It had a sort of you-had-to-be-there vibe.

And yet, there are enough errors in this article that an actual human would make, too. I think this writer needs a proofreader.

I'm surprised she didn't kill him.