I definitely like it, but the three SU songs I listen to more are "What Can I Do for You?", "Comet," and "Peace and Love on the Planet Earth."
I definitely like it, but the three SU songs I listen to more are "What Can I Do for You?", "Comet," and "Peace and Love on the Planet Earth."
Deedee Magno's ability to bring nuance to Pearl's voice is the best I've heard since Melanie MacQueen voiced Lisa Hayes in "Robotech."
I'm a bit embarrassed to admit how quickly I went from knowing absolutely nothing about this show in January to becoming an addict of it by March.
The ending of "Sworn to the Sword" just about killed me, if I'm being honest. There's so much of Pearl's backstory I want to know about - for me it's the most intriguing thing about the "Steven Universe" story and that's saying something.
I've only two bucks on me, but I will pay the third.
Considering that during that year my dad and I painted red, white, and blue racing stripes on our Toyota Corona station wagon, it is hard to disagree with this assumption.
I really really hate how these old commercials get posted somewhere and the second I start listening to them I can immediately sing along to the jingle as if it wasn't 37 years ago.
Shocking twist at the end - Murtaugh's stool indicates a serious disease!
I think he is, because this is a foolproof way of pissing away money in time for his deadline!
"I'm sorry, I couldn't think of anything good."
"Mother pusbuckets!"
I think this is my favorite SNL sketch of all time.
I used to live out by the Lehi Roller Mills in Utah where the original Footloose was filmed. Now you can barely see them because of all the strip malls and development that has gone up by the freeway there.
It's the best of sentimentality - hitting the appropriate callbacks to your past without being so anal about it that it ruins the lightness of the mood. You aren't tied to period accuracy in the plot, but Adam includes so many wonderful Easter eggs for those of us who lived, say, the Voltron years that it makes it…
For some reason, I was obsessed with finding out whether the girl in the study group's actual name was "Ginger" or if that was just her nickname based on her hair color.
It was definitely channeling the "cool beans" moment from Hot Rod. In a good way.
Best line: "I JUST CONJURED HIM."
It's unfair to compare Colbert to John Oliver, because Oliver's network has almost no restriction on what Oliver and his writers can say or do. Move Colbert to HBO and you'd see plenty more of the chutzpah that he displayed at the WHCD years ago.
The thing I couldn't figure out is that during that conversation, there were some strange CGI artifacts - like when Non had his hand around her throat, it was blurred and clearly digitally edited (maybe to protect her blue makeup?). Seemed kind of unnecessary but it was blatant enough that I noticed it.
She was talking about the son who stowed away (and almost got killed on) a runaway train earlier in the season.