Evel Kareebel, I meant the stupid animated frog who ding-ding-bam-bamm-brfgttgkwred his way through a horrifying cover of "Axel F".
Evel Kareebel, I meant the stupid animated frog who ding-ding-bam-bamm-brfgttgkwred his way through a horrifying cover of "Axel F".
They make a ton of money selling the good stuff, sure, but they don't make a ton of money selling the crap that gets cancelled after three weeks.
It wasn't because he was in California that he was more relaxed and happy — it was because he was away from the role that he has to play in his regular life.
I think you might need to send your sarcasm detector in for a tune-up…
Oh, we heard about Mr. Blobby on this side of the pond (though granted I'm in Canada, which is a little or a lot different from the US about that kind of thing). He didn't make a dent on the charts at all, but we certainly got the news.
The phrase "charity single" generally excuses (or at least explains) all manner of offal. But at any rate, we are also quite familiar with the special class of awful (see what I did there? nyuk nyuk) that the #1 spot on the UK charts is capable of unleashing upon the world sometimes. We still haven't recovered from…
That wouldn't actually make them the first band ever to pull a stunt like that…
The idea had been done in film and television before Last Resort.
Biologically yes, but legally he's Archer's.
Yeah, that's clearly the point they're going for; he's either insane or just impossibly naive (in a way that Cheryl, for all her crazy, clearly isn't.)
Yep, the episode where they all went to the spa.
So that she can tap on her inner hatred to get her out of bed in the morning.
I'm not sure if Jessica Walter (or the writers) biffed the line or if they were making a joke that went over my head, but if you listen carefully Malory actually said it was Brent's fault, rather than Brett's, that ISIS can't have scissors.
Not to mention the Literal Doctor. (Yes, he's lost his left hand. So he's going to be "all right.)
One of the reasons this show reminds me of Arrested Development (well, apart from the most obvious one, er, two, er, twenty) is that it's willing to do both clever humor that might fly over some viewers' heads *and* toss in a competely lowbrow joke once in a while too.
I thought it might be where they were going the first time they did it (when she just looked up at the corners of the frame), but I wasn't 100% sure until the second time (the "it's non-diegetic" line).
Yeah, that was the line of the night for me too.
I actually assumed the same at first too. Gotta give the show credit for not going with the most predictable plot.
It's the first time they've specifically built a storyline around Woodhouse's addiction, yes, but they've been depicting him as a heroin junkie in cutaway gags pretty much since S1.
I'm not sure I ever want to meet your kids if you think Archer is for children.