I honestly don't know if I can ever take him seriously again after his little "no, YOU suck, loser!" Twitter tantrum in response to being questioned about Stalker's potential misogyny last year. It was just so, so embarrassing.
I honestly don't know if I can ever take him seriously again after his little "no, YOU suck, loser!" Twitter tantrum in response to being questioned about Stalker's potential misogyny last year. It was just so, so embarrassing.
Yeah, it wasn't part of a series or anything. And yes, it is, rather! I was actually at that very event because I love the show so much.
Oh, Lord, please don't call that PaleyFest; it was just an isolated event and people mixing and matching those 'titles' (as many do) is the bane of my existence. (I work there.)
On…on what sort of food should one eat lox? Like some kind of toast, or…?
I swear every single guest actor says/implies something along those lines when asked about their time on Community. "Everyone was so great and nice and funny! …And Chevy was, um, also there!" Martin Starr's comments are particularly tactful (in his own RR interview).
Kinda the main reason I came into this post. So wonderfully sinister. (And Sara Ramirez was in that ep too!)
He was also on several episodes of Boardwalk Empire. George Remus was sad to get shot. :( He didn't enjoy that at all.
Yeah, I'm with you; the Hoyt reveal came out of nowhere and felt totally unearned to me. I mean, they didn't even give us a (literal) Chekhov's gun prior to that final scene. They set up the thing with the daughter giving Nate the book with the photo in it (but saying it was for David, for some reason…?) earlier in…
(This thread is way old, but I was late to the Empire party, so.) I find that episodes entitled "Home" tend to be particularly heartbreaking — Richard Harrow's introduction on Boardwalk Empire; the finale of The Pacific; our first real 'encounter' with Mary Winchester on Supernatural; Rick has tragic visions of…
Doesn't Frankenstein (as the unreliable-ish narrator) say something to the effect of 'I could tell you exactly how I did it, but I super-regret it now and I wouldn't want anyone else to ever do it sooooo let's just skip that part'? That is such a hilariously perfect cop-out to me.
I love Rory Kinnear somethin' fierce, but Proteus was just so adorable. :( That misdirection was beyond cruel and worked fantastically well, imo.
He's pretty terrible, person-wise, but I admit I smiled dreamily as soon as he showed up. What a lovely, lovely voice!
I'm reading this like "Julio, get the stretch!" I hope that's what you intended.
It kind of sounds like Cosima, if she were putting on a horrifying puppet show.
Do we know where specifically he lives? Because Joan and Sherlock live waaaayyyy the fuck out in totally-need-a-car Bay Ridge, according to the address on the letters from Jamie (my New Yorker real estate-jealousy over that gorgeous brownstone diminished significantly after that reveal), but does Alfredo live out…
Good grief, you'd think I'd know; he was on several eps of my beloved Person of Interest. Thanks! And that's also an amazing username you've got there.
Well, I should have phrased that entirely in the past tense: I heard good things about the early seasons, but naturally it went downhill quickly because, again, Troll Murphy.
See, I had the exact opposite response. It's totally true that people do commit suicide for seemingly 'no reason' and leave people stunned, but I'm just pretty much positive that the writers' room conversation went "What if he kills himself??" "That wouldn't make any sense; we haven't set that up at ALL and it would…
I'm still mad about the way they treated Brooke Smith. That was just appalling. I get that it was a network thing, but I lost a lot of respect for Shonda when she didn't stand up for her more.
Who was the kinda Denis Lavant-lookin' dude who played the P.I.? He was super-familiar. Didn't he do insurance commercials a few years ago or some such? IMDb is being unhelpful, as uszhe.