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B Town
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Not gonna lie, my friends and I would watch each episode of the first season and riff endlessly. It was a good time.

Frankly, I'm still just blown away that both Maebe and Kitty are in "Three Kings."

Yeah, I especially liked the single "Rock N Roll Train" and "Spoilin' For a Fight." Good album.

That about describes my TV-watching patterns versus my internet browsing habits, yup.

This is the kind of shit I expect to find in r/forwardsfromgrandma

How'd the girl in the tattoo parlor do? I happen to know her.

Let's have the funniest person who ever lived try and make those fucking hacky Oscar jokes land. It won't work, everyone will hate them, cue another 400 blog posts about it the next day.

Troublemaker is definitely a put-on. Rivers fucking Cuomo knocks reading books in the lyrics. Books.

All I remember is that a car chase unfolds in a surrounding that is decidedly NOT from the future, with brick walled buildings and 20th-century architecture. And there's a paperclip. The movie erased my mind, but I still managed to retain two banal details.

Still surprised no one mentioned this.

You can't out-act Baldwin, boy. Don't even try.

Part of me wants to catch Phoenix in Phoenix, and see if they're still so drunk or disoriented from touring that they forget what city they're in.

Even worse, the entirety of that scene involved Vince Vaughn telling Owen Wilson "This song is great! Listen to this great song!" I'll bet dollars to donuts it's not even the song used in the movie - some 80's nostalgia-cheese reference, probably.

Misandry don't real, etc. etc. etc.

Woke Up This Morning Put on My Slippers Walked in the Kitchen and Died Hard

Somehow, this makes me have a modicum of respect for Katy Perry allowing footage of her divorce to enter into her own fluffy, otherwise pandering documentary. That was legitimately one of the top 20 most interesting movie moments last year.

What I like about the ending is that, if you choose to look at it in a much more pragmatic way, "love" or some such bullshit is not what changed Bradley Cooper's character. Him taking his fucking meds did.

Better Off Ted is breezy, charming, solid, and even laugh-out-loud funny several times. It's never ever a chore to watch, and makes me wish I saw the cast in more places on film and TV.

Great food, though, particularly the burgers.

It was Kubrick's last stroke of genius, indeed - recognizing his own limitations as a director, and how it would stifle the story he wanted to tell.