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grahamcracker3
avclub-720542829a1e13bbc36b4698b3324b45--disqus

Oh I disagree. Ricky, DJ, Bubba, Day, Reed and what's left of Phil are great personalities.

I've been thinking a lot about this wonderful episode the last couple days, trying to come up with a cathartic statement that will best sum up how conflicted every one of these characters make me feel…and I think I have it: "Doing the right things for the wrong reasons only leads to pyrrhic victories."

So, basically, they intentionally wrote themselves into a corner at the end of last season to force themselves to do the 'pull lyrics out of a hat' trick. Which, honestly, is often when Archer is at its best.

I would say that once you've made a program with both Glenn Close AND Christopher Walken, you've probably reached the end of exploring a genre.

Because he wants it for himself. The minute the girls start sticking their hands in it, he'll feel like it's tainted.

I want to walk right out that door with Cam. I also want to call Cam a petulant child. I don't know which is right. I just know she is breaking my heart.

That basement bar scene was one of the most magnificent displays of cinematography I've seen in a long while.

Oh no doubt he was a fierce competitor. Golf is the sport that will chew you up and spit you out with the least amount of sympathy. I'm only 35 so any memory of Arnie playing were those Senior Skins Game exhibitions vs Jack/Trivino et al… they'd all be kidding around while 60-year-old Arnold was still grinding out

Any conversation about 'Coolest American Male Ever' includes this man.

The interesting thing I've always found about pro golf, is that in spite of the 'niche' nature of it, a lot of people tend to be generally aware of the top players if for no other reason than it's the one sport you see on network television every weekend.

Was it high art? No…but it was still hilarious to me as a teen. Was about the only show my whole family watched together. Of course we knew it was stupidly formulaic, but only because the parts that really mattered were what kind of physical humor they'd concoct…and those actors could land it almost every time.

I just want to crawl into the set and hang out with these characters. Is it the best 'prestige' show on right now?…no…but it might be the most endearing and affable. The committee meeting at the end may have been a little on the comic relief nose, but anyone who's worked at a small family-owned business of any type

I solved the above moral dilemma by seeing BOTH Radiohead and Hall & Oates live this year :-)

So I'm new to The Americans and have finally gotten here in my catch-up watching. One of the things that I've been finding so remarkable about this show is its ability to break up the tension by injecting a moment of silly comic relief out of nowhere. That loud menacing crash sound punctuated by 'oh he's throwing a

Hell yeah "Let Down" has always been top 5 for me and I was so ecstatic to get it. I didn't even realize it was that rare but I still was still in shock awe like everyone else. Same handle over there, more lurker than poster haha.

Hey meeting people is easy.

I was at Tuesday's show and the entire band was having a great time, Thom included. There were even *GASP* smiles and jokes! There are hardly enough words to describe how incredible that show [and presumably Wednesday's] was. Pretty sure the contest winner is a regular over at the RH subreddit, nice that one of us

Myxamatosis? No…that's not it either…

That late-afternoon PBS block slowly morphed over time
Square One/3-2-1 Contact 87'-'90
Carmen San Diego/Square One '90 - '93ish
Then Bill Nye bumped Square One
Then I think it was Wishbone that bumped Carmen, by that point it was my younger sibs watching so not sure.

Square fucking One.