avclub-70bbc051341bb1f5c1fdb481a767c1cc--disqus
kphisch
avclub-70bbc051341bb1f5c1fdb481a767c1cc--disqus

This has always been a great show, but I like it's teetering off, with all the inconsistencies in last season's finale, although it was written and directed by the show's creator. In New York Times' review of "Up All Night," it referenced this show as pulling its punches in terms of having fun with the baby, or,

I'd really like to know to. It was weird though, as it was probably a voiceover from the little kid. If it was him, though, it's just a testament to what a freaking great actor he is.

Stand-up sequences often aren't as funny as the rest of the show
Not that they even have to be. He could be making a grand point that real life is a lot funnier than what people waste their money on (not that nobody wastes their money on real life), but the audience just keeps on laughing, even before he's said

I don't know why people keep on saying it was painful. Louie handles rejection pretty well. Have we ever seen him stew over it, besides the end, you know, just a full episode?

Criticisms of your Criticisms
The most appealing aspect of this episode was how much it tempted me to watch every single episode, especially this one, over and over again. Maybe it isn't the best, since I remember laughing like crazy at both the last two episodes and the Thanksgiving episode, and something about this

well, the grossest part of the alpaca scene was how closely it resembled another gyzymatic(not a word) bodily fluid, which is decidedly more gross, but I had the same problem with mental imagery due to that poorly worded sentence.