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Libidinous Kettle
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She looks like she's currently in a hangover. Nice to see the adorable Tobin, who this time did not ask if Sofia had to beat off other robots to appear on the show.

I find 7 very sexy too. Maybe she's underrated in that department.

Melissa's head gear made me want a Jeopardy where all the women contestants wear those hats you see on British royal weddings.

I think 15 was the first time they showed boob on a network, when she played a woman with breast cancer.

Okay, I got you. Well, if there is nothing Dems can do; if becoming more social democratic doesn't work because of gerrymandering, party loyalty, and hatred of government and liberals, then, dunno, the United States stays like this for a lot longer until new generations of people come of age and start voting for

But people vote for their team, and have their own, usually false idea, of what "left" and "right" means. Get rid of those terms and offer solutions that will help fix the problem and help people. Instead of blind ideology.

It might take a while to get out of this national moment where people who vote stop thinking of taxes as terrible things. This is cultural, as all shifting political viewpoints is cultural, and pedagogical. Educating the vox populi, if conservatives didn't control school boards and textbooks, has to happen to get the

Ossoff evidently ran a bland campaign that didn't inspire with a powerful, populist economic message? Is that right? Two things can be true: The Democrats, not being the danger the Republicans are, still lose to them because they are terrible at messaging that shouldn't have to be messaged, and people are stupid and

You know you can always cut back these posts to twice or once a week. Or any other schedule that give you more of a life. We wouldn't care.

All of that is true, since he was a rich character, which this show does very well. But are we sure Chuck's dead? That was the tragic implication of the final scene, and it would be undercut if Chuck weren't gone, but maybe the show has a more optimistic resolution in store for him, mirroring Kim's existential car

I can also sympathize with Chuck—more than the feeling generated by the artistry of his depiction—because I've been spending the day trying to find my copy of To Kill a Mockingbird for next week's book club, and I still can't find in my rather large, unorganized (and mostly unread) library. But I haven't gone crazy.

I had the thought during the cold open of Chuck assuring his little brother that Mabel would be alright that it could be meta and the show was reassuring us Kim also would be, and not just right after her previous episode car crash, but for the show. Since they've done a superb job making Kim Wexler lovable, they

See, I thought Chuck tearing his house down was the nice "Out, damned electrical wiring" of Chuck feeling guilty about saying that to Jimmy, which elicited an involuntary "Whoa!" from me. (Or the Yellow Wall Paper if I have the memory correct.) But it can also be how Donna described it, as Chuck needing a power

Hey, greetings from the future. McGee here (this review and his past reviews have been mostly fine) does a critical pet peeve of mine in complaining about something that isn't there. Maybe the writers don't want to give Frank emotional depth and motivation, at this time, or ever if they decide not to do it at all.

I've watched a few episodes here and there. It's not that bad. The exterior shot of the facade of the house, though, is comical: they apparently live in a stone mansion, for some reason, but the interior is way too small to fill up that space.

I'm not a fan of how modern horror is done. Babadook and The Witch were great movies (and It Follows was pretty good), in part because they didn't do the jump scare cliches and gross outs, but produced a much scarier atmosphere and dread, with deeper writing of literary quality too. I wish the genre would find box

Huh, he sounds older than his age. And that's not a nasally voice. I have a nasally voice. But at least I don't sound older than my age.

I just looked up Alexandra Kerry for fact checking, and, yep, she would have been a hot Democratic president's daughter.

Let's put O'Neal through law school so he can become a constitutional law expert!

I was happy with all the zany subplots and how they fit together to tell the story of this one studio head going about his eventful working day. Plus, I took all of them as a love letter to the movies and studio system. I imagine all of the subplots had some basis in real history.