avclub-6eff75e7ea1e4eaecc24df1ca043de61--disqus
poot
avclub-6eff75e7ea1e4eaecc24df1ca043de61--disqus

I'm not sure you're making a great case for Fucked Up by claiming that they remember a time when people didn't do things "tunelessly," because tunelessness is one of the defining characteristics of Abraham's performance. Likewise, I don't think it's great to reminisce about a time when people didn't "mutter" and claim

I'm disinclined to ask any Congressman a question to which I want an accurate answer; that said, asking a dead one would probably be a step in the right direction.

I prefer my denial. People with shitty musical taste are simply incapable of the quality/depth of my feelings. It's a fair compromise; if I conceded that maybe they were capable of those feelings, and yet felt them in response to their shitty, shitty music… well I'm not sure what I would do then, but it would probably

8 hours and no aural sex joke. Bummer.

Seconded, although the music also rubbed me the wrong way most of the time. There was nothing wrong with it, really, but it felt like at least half the songs did the same thing: they started off with one or two tracks, repeated those tracks endlessly with a few minor variations, stacked more

I wonder if that even includes their lobbyists, some of whom must focus exclusively upon influencing intellectual property legislation.

I'm sure he'd like to be a lot of things other than himself in his own marital bed with his wife.

Corgan's cover is breathlessly enthusiastic, totally unaware parody - and self-parody - of the emotions that Nicks was ostensibly attempting to capture. The man couldn't remove the arena/opera facets of his own vocal stylings with a full set of surgeon's tools from 200 years in the future.

I was sorta hoping for Beckett to have sex with the tiger, but to be honest I didn't really expect it to happen.

Except for that part in the very first episode where a kid from town, who was originally not from the town, gets out of the town to find his biological mom (who had never been to the town) and then brings her into the town.

Yes, but then at least we get a scene where the CIA's "careful planning" to get a win on U.S. soil winds up with a bomb going off in D.C.

"Fuck the charter" and its followups are dark horse candidates for lines-of-the-night. I obviously missed the entire 24 zeitgeist that gripped our nation, but I'll give Homeland some credit for making the cavalier lawlessness of the American government, and especially the executive branch, not seem like the best thing

I can't tell if you're being sarcastic about the military rules stuff; the real military rules state that as long as you're playing ball with power-brokers and politicians, you are exempt from any and all rules that might be inconvenient, unless of course you're planning on doing something both truly horrible and too

Note to self: change password on luggage.

I would put most of the "feedback" into a diversified stock portfolio, but the actual percentage would vary depending on numerous factors, including number of kids and the size of any alimony payments due. Some of the "feedback" would undoubtedly be tied up in real property, too.

"Why would he let her go and then come back and kill her later? That would be insane! This isn't 'nam, there are rules!"

I think they've been setting him up as a serial killer for quite some time now, or at least some sort of nemesis for a future season. It's another just-interesting-enough idea that will nevertheless get absolutely… well, I really don't want to say "murdered," but, that.

Everybody didn't see it coming, but the AV Club comments section for Dexter contains a lot of input from that narrow band of folks who 1) are smarter than the writers of this show, and yet 2) are dumb/stubborn/tragically loyal enough to still be watching it as anything other than background noise whilst doing chores.

When the mothafuckin' English language gets disrespected, somebody gotta mothafuckin' represent.

This is the best the show's been in a long, long time, but I echo the reviewer's - and Carrie's - sentiments exactly. Losing Singer and Beaver is going to hurt Supernatural like nobody's goddamn business. He's been misused constantly in the past, but tonight's episode demonstrated that the writers did have some idea