Oh, yeah, forgot about the Gawker thing, but that was only published because Louis was famous. It was clickbait.
Oh, yeah, forgot about the Gawker thing, but that was only published because Louis was famous. It was clickbait.
I think nobody does anything because it was pure speculation based on Jen Kirkman's description of an anonymous person which the internet presumed to be Louis C.K., despite Kirkman explicitly saying it wasn't Louis.
"No Problem." Although "All We Got" and "Finish Line" are definitely contenders.
I have listened to it through twice and then just repeatedly listened to No Problems, All We Got, Mixtape, and Finish Line. I do find it super listenable as an overall mixtape, and then get sucked in by the good verses.
Agreed. I have been relistening to Mixtape repeatedly since it came out. Great verses by both Young Thug and Lil Yachty.
I think he has been there for a while. I like his music, but I expect him to sound immature, ridiculous and vain whenever he says anything in public. He doesn't have any filter or much of a sense of social decency.
Yeah, I don't see how Peggy is anything but a sociopath. Basically every scene that is reinforced. The way she treats her husband (terrible as he is) is just plain sociopathic. Driving off with the guy in the trunk, presumably because she is desperate to get out of her life, deceiving her husband into thinking that…
I second this comment. The parents were believable in their roles. Making them more slick and "acted" may not have helped. At least to my untrained eye.
I loved this episode so much. I am not a first generation immigrant - my great-grandparents were the ones who made the trip to America - but I feel like every moment was so relatable. Every single story and request made by the parents was one for which I could find an analogous example in my own parents' lives. So…
I think the people knew he was being ironic. They were in on the joke - they just weren't articulating themselves in a manner that looks good when written out.
I love when he comforts the first customer who sees the alligator and turns around, saying, "That's a dollar we're losing as well."
Isn't that redundant?
I watched Wayward Pines this summer, but I can't even remember if I watched the final episode or stopped after the penultimate episode. I'm not sure if that says more about me or the show.
I actually liked the fourth season of Arrested Development. I watched the whole series on Netflix, watching the first three seasons about a year before the fourth came out. I didn't find the fourth season any less funny than the other seasons, even if it was more clunky with the pacing and the plot. I guess I…
Same here. I still haven't seen Firefly. I guess I watch it at some point. But I did enjoy Serenity and it was a good enough movie that I doubt seeing the show would have made a big difference in my enjoyment of it.
Yeah. But they did throw me off the scent of having that thing happen at that moment by having Amy seemingly cheat to pick Kevin's name earlier in the scene. And I thought it was a lot funnier in the show than in the movie.
I have never seen Teen Wolf before. But I'm pretty sure that was a penis - the screen grab is definitely not the money shot. Right after that moment, he turns and appears to tuck something pink into his pants, which I'm guessing must have been his penis.
I thought Amy's rejection of Kevin was so funny that it made up for it. That was the funniest part of that storyline for me. Not necessarily an unpredictable gag, but it was still hilarious in its execution and for how devastating it was, especially since the show had given every indication that Amy liked Kevin, even…
The "Oh shit" comment was the single funniest moment of the entire series for me.
I think a certain lack of continuity is inevitable from the movie to the show. Andy was a fairly one-note character in the movie who was a foil for Coop and they are turning him in the show into a character driving a story arc. I think they kept the essence of the character the same and that is really the important…