avclub-6ef36c8de89f58253dbbd5f338837bf1--disqus
Audience Member
avclub-6ef36c8de89f58253dbbd5f338837bf1--disqus

Eh, Diddy was way in the spirit of '90s MC Hammer hip-hop school of just sampling a very popular song from 10 years prior. He gave them credit and anyone who was sampled made HUGE money. The Vanilla Ice School is just to sample something and pray nobody catches on that he didn't credit the original artists.

Season 7 was awesome. I don't know what other people were on, but it was leagues ahead of that shitheap of season six and complete waste of New York City in season 8. Plus, you had Jon Voight at his absolute weirdest. Let's play darts, indeed!

Ah, it's Channel Awesome - Nope!

I think it was more the realization of an idea that four people (that weren't LAN partiers and whatnot - basically laymen gamers) could play a first-person shooter at the same time in the same room and the game had a property that was recognizable to a wide audience and played fairly well for the time. I tried playing

Looks like it's not GoG, unless I'm missing it.

Agreed. I got a similar feeling to when I was in college and my other white friends would quote "Chappelle's Show" sketches not because they were witty, but because they felt it gave them a pass to say racist stuff without the satirical context. It's like they wanted to make this generation's "Blazing Saddles" but

I really don't see the stigma of animation being a "kids only" format.

Ahem. "The Good Dinosaur" came out last year.

If they're subjected to the "Minions" short beforehand where one of them huffs a bag of dogshit, I'd say it's probably out of contention.

Yea, R-rated comedies are truly in short demand these days.

The worst was Devin Faraci saying verbatim that this movie was "woke af." Because apparently the idea of religion and God being man-made concepts to help control the masses is a new concept.

I have no doubt that fiction became reality for him, or maybe it already was at that time and he wanted to poke fun at himself.

That doesn't surprise me.

Her story reminds me of the way Paul Scheer described Eddie Murphy on the set of (ugh) "Meet Dave" - completely removed from the cast. He had a car drive him from his trailer to the set and he seemed generally unengaged with the cast. But there was a nice coda to the story where, after shooting, Murphy came out,

It's also what I personally call "The '24' Fallacy."

No joke: I have a video of that episode that has this sketch. I can upload it, if you'd like.

The thing is how many rock bottoms can this show have? It runs into a new one every season. Next time, I assume they'll just send out hordes to bash viewers in the face.

"Aw, somebody stop the damn match! He's got a family to feed!"

Not that there should be any comparison because it's leagues ahead of it, but you look at how "Breaking Bad" handled big character deaths (outside of Gus) and even though it was heartbreaking and bleak as shit, it was never overtly cruel, throwing it in the viewers face.

I still don't understand the appeal of Daryl, besides Norman Reedus being a generally likable actor. There's absolutely nothing to that character at all. But I guess that could be said for pretty much every character.