"Pizza Haus!"
"Pizza Haus!"
"The Gold Violin" also works well for Ken. Cosgrove. Accounts.
Except when they were oranges, because his persona was a survivor. *dons ribbon pin*
I thought Steve was going to realize that Francine wrote the note because of a misspelling. I'm a little disappointed that didn't happen, but not too much.
I think you're right, @avclub-6dfc2bc029f2866526ad45e7cfe82790:disqus . Even though it focused on an Asian tiger mom, the fact that Greg and Terry were exhibiting the same behavior redeems it. This wasn't about "the Asian way" vs. "the American way"—this was about different styles of parenting within American culture…
…or without it being his dad controlling an avatar.
As soon as she grabbed the Chinese sword, I thought, "Well, that makes sense." See? Continuity!
Wow. I knew the airing order was messed up, but I had no idea HOW messed up until I saw that chart. Holy cow.
I feel the same way about the Star Trek: TNG episode "The Inner Light." It's a fantastic episode in its own right, and it's a beautiful story, but I used to watch it thinking more about Picard/Kamin than the civilization around him.
The only thing I really remember about "The Long Dark" was Lt. Barclay's futurized Lord's Prayer that substituted "in space" for "on earth."
Oh, Corwin. How is it that Keffer (?) appeared in the opening credits, but Corwin never did? Granted, he wasn't that important of a character, but he had more screen time than most, and he had some personality traits.
Exactly. "It's nice to talk to someone" plays right into the relationship Martha desperately wants with Clark. I love how everything about "Clark" is calculated to be exactly what gets Martha going: He's a man who respects her as a person! He doesn't think of her as a sexual object; in fact, he's reluctant to have sex…
I'm waiting for some backstory on that necklace. We don't actually NEED any, since Elizabeth and Phil's reactions to it tell us plenty, but I strongly suspect that we're going to get a flashback explaining exactly under what circumstances Phil gave it to Elizabeth. (If the writers go that route, the flashback better…
He doesn't carry a condom because he doesn't assume he's having sex—what a gentleman!
It was the first time I connected "Clark" with "Clark Kent"—think the Christoper Reeve-type, at least in Martha's eyes.
I was disappointed that she wore the blonde bouffant for her commercial—I suppose that can be explained away by it being her signature scent, therefore she has to be in her signature look. I was quite relieved when she stepped out on the runway with the red wig. I hope she varies her runway looks from now on!
For "Mad Men" dreams, I prefer the one Betty has when she's giving birth to baby Gene. Compare what her dream father says to her ("You're a house cat—you're very important and you have very little to do.") with the way her actual father talked about her to Sally (telling Sally that, unlike her mother, she's very smart…
I didn't get the impression that he destroyed the world, just that he completely cut his town off from everything else—which, from the perspective of the townspeople, amounts to the same thing. I mean, does it matter whether supplies exist outside of the town if there's no way they can ever access them?
The scenes of Dwight and his nephew were the only good part of the episode for me. It was the most humanizing thing they've ever written for Dwight (other than when he was concussed). Maybe it's that I just found out this week that I'm having a son, but I thought those scenes were great.
It means that it's his decision not to get rid of her. It's a riff on a sexist ad, but it implies that all she does merely earns her keep.