These are amazing.
These are amazing.
I honestly forgot Katz was a character in the books. Then again, I haven't read any of them in about 10 years.
He was! The article was amended somewhere along the line to say Terry, but I've made the fix. Thanks for the catch!
But the show does not adopt his point-of-view! Well, not all of the time! It's complicated!
I have to assume the scene in the next week on where Haddie introduces Lauren can only be followed by one where she says, "And here's that man about town and beloved gadfly of the upper classes, Piecat!" And then the Bravermans applaud as Piecat pops his monocle and says, "Pip, pip! Have some pie!"
Please don't make me lose my job. Because you know I will do this.
There may or may not be screeners, but they're meant to be posted about at a certain time, so as to make it seem like there AREN'T screeners. (HBO often does this, too, particularly with GOT as we get later into the season.) Basically, if most everybody's reviews go up around the same time, that means there was an…
The sexiest.
This is honestly one of my favorite episodes of the season. It will almost certainly be in my top five (unless the finale tanks it, which is always possible).
Looks like SOME people broke the embargo!
I got bitten by one of my cats, and now I'm turning into a cat.
I'm not a big fan. I have a review of it elsewhere on the site. It also seems unlikely the aspiring Ken Burns fan would be, like, "YEAH! I GOTTA WATCH THE NATIONAL PARKS!"
Right you are. I had a whole bunch of stuff in there about the makeup of the entire Crowe family, but it was wordy and pointless, and in cutting it out, I juxtaposed Dewey with the wrong relation. Will fix.
My parents always wonder why I don't own a house yet in Los Angeles, so I feel your pain.
Yeah, but the finale is really the first point when the aliens arc intersects with the "Is there a God?" arc in a pointed way. And in the last scene, no less.
Well, I was thinking about how BSG and Lost did that as well when writing that, BUT BSG had religious themes throughout its run (though, granted, not to the preponderance it did in the last episodes).
He is going to Entertainment Weekly. I believe he talked about it on his blog.
Season five is often a time when a show really starts to show its age. There are only a few sitcom season fives that I can think of that were better than Community's, and most of those were because the show majorly shook things up in some way or another. (Mary Tyler Moore, for instance, became more of a workplace…
I think we're forgetting a little poster from the season two days, a poster named COMMUNITY SUCKS.
Zeek is going to die, and be placed in the trunk of the Pontiac. The Bravermans will drive it up to the Redwood forest and roll it off a cliff into the ocean as Sigur Ros plays.