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MyNameIsNoneOfYourGoddamnBusin
avclub-734ffb84cfa214922893511fae356b45--disqus

You will never hear a better country cover of a Sex Pistols song.

Took in a concert: Reverend Horton Heat/Dale Watson/Rosie Flores. I never want to hear anyone call country pop music country music ever again.

Martin Short was on Letterman about two months ago and despite getting three segments of air time, Mulaney was not mentioned once, which is weird for a talk show guest currently on a network series (officially he was on to promote a book, but still you would expect it come up somehow).

I knew having seen a film called "The Last Viceroy" would some day pay off in the most minor way imaginable.

I thought he was busy touring with his rock band, which is actually a thing he does and attracts paying audiences to.

I was fifteen-sixteen in 2002, and still felt way too old for that.

With some nice shag carpeting.

I thought the same way about the kids for the first season and most of the second. I got that they had to be there, but it seemed like they were getting way too much screentime for nothing storylines. They've rectified it since then and it looks like they're going to be used better if this year if the end of the

I see it a little in the face, but it's not that strong a resemblance.

Was it in a basement and did you have to do unspeakable things to get in? If so, where does one sign up?

Homicide: Life on the Street also premiered after the Super Bowl. It didn't really help much and the show still struggled for ratings, so it's not always the golden jumpstart it's made out to be.

Not really sure that was the point of that book . . .

Bigger question: why is the Sci-Fi channel running CSI re-runs? I mean, it's not real science, but it still seems like a stretch.

It's not really a "great show," but it's good enough and it seems to avoid the pitfalls Leary wrote into "Rescue Me" (maybe Peter Tolan was the problem—who would've guessed?)

But of course Anchorage wasn't an American city in either 1846 or 1860.

I wonder about a show like this: is the network paying the companies for the rights to air their commercials? Because there's something brilliantly fucked up about that.

My biggest impression: this show sure uses a lot of David Bowie music.

I think the fact that no one saw the movie probably helped.

You'e Fired!

I doubt they'll axe her before the season's over—the only two times I can recall them doing were Charles Rocket and Damon Wayans and those were both for reasons beyond just sucking.