Elizabeth and Gaad. Because I think that was in the trailer.
Elizabeth and Gaad. Because I think that was in the trailer.
It's unsettling that I find the drone-gift-delivery totally realistic and the "company does something unbelievably nice" plot completely contrived.
I found it meh. I didn't realize it until this episode, but I didn't buy into the Andrew and Zelda love story that much after all. I was totally rooting for her to keep the job… actually, this might explain more about my love life than the show.
Yeah, but it really takes me out of the moment. I don't think, "Oh, there's that funny character Ed," I think, "OMG JON HAMM."
I think if it were earlier in the season, they would have eliminated Gregory for basically ignoring the challenge.
If Leslie Knope was related to a President, she would know it.
I love Jon Hamm, but episodes like "Ron and Leslie" make me feel like the last season should focus as much as it can on the core cast while we still have them.
Do you think she was just improvving nonsense, or did she sit down and learn those lines?
Whenever I think "young Bradley Cooper," I remember this goofy tv movie he was in with Anya from Buffy. I don't remember the plot, sort of a spoof on the Bachelor…? Anyway, it came out when I was in middle school and I spent about three weeks in love with Bradley Cooper, then forgot who he was until I saw The…
A cursory googling reveals: http://arthur.wikia.com/wik…
I'm now much more invested in the love story between the possibly related peasants than I am in the main one.
Ballerinas can't be tall? I think she was wearing heels.
How did the boardinghouse matron see the guy climbing the pipe, but didn't notice Carter pointing a gun in his face?
Fun fact: some of the biggest opponents of suffragism were the anti-suffragettes - women who did not want the right to vote. They're credited with creating the Betsy Ross myth, as a way of trying to prove that women had a specific place in society, but not government.
Still feels like Chad Michael Murray.
It's true. I haven't stopped thinking about Colin Firth in leather pants since 2003.
It's plausible that on Gilmore Girls, everyone was drinking real coffee, all the time.
Is that what they said? I thought they were "plussed," as in, the nonexistent antonym to nonplussed.
I think they're trying extra hard now to show that Boyle and Diaz are just friends, and wipe out the creepier bits of his personality.
I think it's a silly sitcom, and I think it's sometimes good to remember that the majority of cops are upstanding people who are really trying to do the best they can to serve and protect. We can't hold them all responsible for the actions of a few and the pervasion of a broken justice system.