avclub-77fe6e828924d44e593f7d864d1e6245--disqus
the voice of raisins
avclub-77fe6e828924d44e593f7d864d1e6245--disqus

The reason is that he was a person willing to be in it.

Randy Quaid is looking less crazy every day.

I don't know what the hell La Croix is, but I went to high school with the drummer, and it's cool to see someone I know get featured here.

When I was in high school, my dad got a turntable that you could plug a flash drive into to make digital copies of his records. This prompted me to spend a lot of time over the next few months sifting through his fairly large record collection and copying a lot of it onto the flash drive and then into my iTunes.

I also thought it was clever how when he called Kimmy in the last episode he referred to himself as Dick, and said that they needed to get a divorce so he could get remarried, which leaves the door open for The Reverend basically becoming a parallel-universe Don Draper.

The AV Club

Say what you want about Philadelphia, that town is proud of its piss-troughs.

That's fair. I think, though, that in her review Kayla made the connection between this plot and the real-life criticism of Fey much more explicit than I think came across in the episode, especially since many people who don't read the AV Club regularly probably didn't make the connection, if they remembered there

This plotline was a bit of a dead end and certainly not the show's best, but when I watched this episode it came off less like the characters were so snarky that any genuine care is beneath them, than that they were so focused on how Titus's play could be understood negatively that they didn't bother to consider the

Nobody owns electrons, man. They're free, and all around us. They're inside us. Radical, huh?

I was referring to the golden calf incident, but yeah, that too, I guess.

He also almost killed them all while they wandered through the desert after he went through all that effort to free them from slavery.

I mean, manipulation of poor people to think they like stuff that rich people like is kind of how the US came into existence. You think some poor rock farmer in Western Massachusetts gave a fuck about the stamp tax? Hell no! But the Continental Congress was still able to convince guys like that to die for freedom

The real estate's cheap because nobody wants it. Same deal with the taxes.

Mississippi, Goddam!

Kind of, but her whole deal was that she was a fairly normal person who was thrown into Ray's crazy family. She wasn't annoying because that's just how she was, she was annoying because the Barones made her that way.

How does Kanye not have lawyers that could have seen this coming?

The first season, I thought Tina was in fifth, Gene was in third, and Louise was in second. Now I think Tina is in seventh, Louise is in third, and Gene follows the other two to school then just kind of does whatever once he gets there.

Does the British version have as much variety though? One of the things I like about the Antiques Roadshow is that the stuff people bring in is often really distinctive and particular to wherever the show is. Like you might get a lot of Native American stuff in the southwest or colonial and nautical stuff in the

If your tomb's a pointy square, then the Brits won't leave you there.