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ajensetta
avclub-78571f3ed2cc64e2a81e964ce63615d6--disqus

… and "Crunchy" the Clown

Mr. Black

Does this show demonstrate a kind of conservatism that is reflective of our current politics. I am a big fan of the show but sometimes I have trouble working through my qualms with the underlying message being toted whether intentionally or not. Here's a friend of mine working through the possibilities. Let me know

Oh my god! Was it a nice hat? Oh My God!!

yeah, Lt. Broccoli is right, many of the original alt.simpsons people are die-hard about the first few seasons. They claim better character development, story-telling, and other traits that I feel are done better in the prime s3-s8 period, and with the brilliant postmodern edge that defined the Simpsons for me. At the

I have found this show to be nothing but genius and demonstrative of a sort of pure emotion that so excellently avoids falling into the depths of sentimentality (save the dated 90's soundtrack). I believe if John Munch had died after this show or at the end, I would have my respect of him and Belzer intact. Screw the

You hit the nail on the head there buddy. The awkward energy, the stiffness, the move by Larry to read the vows, that smile of Larry's, Hank's terrible vows in the first place. All of these things are Hilariously awkward, self-effacing and tragic. Just like the show. Talk about the invention of cringe comedy. This