Even "Sean Saves the World"?
Even "Sean Saves the World"?
"They really get the incest right."
The departure of Ann and Chris was, for me, a relief. At the end of the episode, I couldn't help but feel that it was necessary for the show to progress.
They really wasted an opportunity to breathe some new life into the show with the election/council stuff. I can't believe how badly they just sleepwalked through it.
They need to bring in a true foil for Leslie and the department.
I agree, but I have no idea how they would handle a shift to state politics (if that's the next step) when their handling of municipal politics in a small town is already pretty sloppy.
I said this in the latest Parks recap thread, but P&R is starting to give me a really bad, late Office vibe.
It truly is a hilarious twist of fate that Parks and Recreation is now on the verge of running so long that it becomes stale.
I loved how perfectly he nailed the "keep the energy level high and boundlessly positive even if everything is going to shit" commitment of your typical, Disney show host.
I have to respect any hosts who just completely drop their public personas and commit to the sketches with 100% energy. Drake and Timberlake lose all pretense and buy in completely.
"It was a tacit admission that there is absolutely nothing to say about the central premise anymore."
The problem is that you just know Parks and Rec would take every single character and eventually put them back into the parks department as if nothing had changed whatsoever. The amount of story arcs that have been dropped without any explanation is mind-boggling.
I'm still just trying to figure out what, if any, involvement Ron might have had in the development of the "Business Liaison" position.
And, yet, hundreds of thousands of dollars were funneled into the election for ONE WARD. I have a tough time figuring out what exactly Pawnee is, let alone how its government supposedly functions.
B- for some solid gags throughout, but tonally, those last 5 minutes were a mess. It seemed to lose its focus.
I thought Steve McQueen's speech was particularly dreadful for a guy who just won best picture, but I guess it's not out of place these days.
I have to admit, I found a lot of the very self-aware, cynical bits to be pretty funny. Stewie questioning the logic of Little Red Riding Hood was pretty solid.
Will "Simpsoning" enter the lexicon like "jumping the shark"?
Bob's Burgers has got to be the most consistently funny comedy on TV right now. Every week, I think that they must be due for a dud (or, at least, a "dud" by their high standards) and it just does not disappoint.
TWD: Looking for Sophia after the first 10 minutes.