avclub-8185bd5b4a127940d1717ad13dfb1ea7--disqus
brig915
avclub-8185bd5b4a127940d1717ad13dfb1ea7--disqus

I was reading an article about All in the Family and found out it aired on CBS after it was passed on by ABC, because the head of CBS at the time wanted to replace the shows that had older skewing audiences, like Green Acres. It's crazy to think of Les Moonves gutting the CriminalNCISCSIBloods shows to air a show

While I'm irritated that Laganja is staying another week, it was definitely time for Milk to go home. I'm all about the weird queens, but Milk seemed to not have any actual vision, attention to detail or character behind her weirdness (unlike Sharon).
I'm finding it a bit odd that halfway through the season, I don't

I wonder if her being the fan-favorite queen has her on the defensive, too. Haven't the others who were cast because of the internet fallen really early?

I've seen every episode, and only now connected that Luke Wheeler was on SMASH. It took me pretty much the entire first season to connect that Charles Eston is Chuck from Whose Line Is It Anyway? Apparently a scruffy beard is as convincing a disguise to me as Clark Kent's glasses.

I had to resist the urge not to scream "fuck off, Peter" at my television during that promo. Holy shit, talk about not taking responsibility for your actions. "My cheating wasn't as bad as your cheating." Fuck. I'm going to be so mad during that episode.

I don't know if Alicia particularly wanted to get back together with him, more than wanting to believe that Will didn't die angry with her. A whole part of her journey talking to the Judge and Finn is to find out why he called her, and she just looks so crushed when she thinks he was calling her to yell about poaching

I spent half of the episode trying to remember if we had met JaMort or Schneeburger before. I guess I just missed that they were in Homecoming.
I watched Alive Day Memories when it first aired. Fantastic doc.

I think I read on Hit Fix that there's actually another episode that should have aired before this one. I'm curious if they aired any two eps consecutively. Confusing the audience you have seems to be a very, very strange strategy. I can understand if one or two eps were aired out of order, but to do that to all of

Yes! Yes! Yes! This packed SO MUCH MORE of a punch than all the Grey's deaths have recently. I'm so desensitized to Grey's Anatomy death by this point, I haven't even teared up since the shooting scene (when I cried like a little bitch). The plane crash and all subsequent deaths have been totally emotionally lost on

I can't remember if David Caruso's NYPD Blue character was killed or just written off, but Dan Stevens should have looked into his story before leaving Downton for the immediate and guaranteed movie fame!

He just got married and wants to start a family and finds the 22-episode schedule to be too much. He expressed interest in doing cable, though.
I agree about this being Will's best season. I think Josh has made it really difficult to choose which episode to submit for the Emmys (J/K, it's Hitting the Fan).

I'm actually more amazed by how they get the queens who were eliminated early/controversially to not totally ruin their talking head segments. You can KIND of tell when it's someone's elimination episode, but really more in hindsight. You'd think that some of them would be super nasty and negative in all of their

Long anticipated moment in my house last night, as yesterday was the first time I sat my husband down to watch RPDR. Besides the total culture shock, he seemed to enjoy it enough, laughing a few times. Snatch Game is definitely the right episode to introduce a straight guy to the show.
I'm totally loving Bianca, and

Yes, I thought they were heavily foreshadowing that he was going to kill himself.

If I remember correctly, Gene Siskel died very close to the Oscars, and his special remembrance was Whoopi acknowledging that he wasn't in the In Memorium, but should have been, by giving a thumbs up towards the sky.

I read that they're not going to address the character's cause of death at all. The episode takes place a few weeks following Finn's funeral and is the Glee club's memorial to him. So, "art" imitating life.

My understanding is that Elmo never went away from Sesame Street, they just had the understudy take over.

While I don't think it is quite as versatile as "fuck," I think it's pretty funny that the word "grace" can also be used as many different parts of speech.

I think I heard Jeselnik talk about this before where they have writers to help the non-comics with their material, and nearly everything is prescreened by CC (and sometimes the roastee or dais members request that certain topics be off limits). I'd guess that the non-standups had a mix of their jokes and ones