Well, that depends on your definition of "people" and "safe."
Well, that depends on your definition of "people" and "safe."
The Empire version of "Take Me to the River" is a nod to the Al Green (original) version. The Talking Heads version was a cover. https://www.youtube.com/wat…
I think I misread your original post. I meant "What has ever been good about Cami?" On the whole, the show itself has been good to very good, depending on the week, from about the middle of Season 1.
"Oops! A naked picture of me that a "friend" took is the last photo on my camera before the professional shots I just took of your bar…"
What good?
"At no point does anyone address the fact that the stories these husbands are telling involve them being dumb and their wives not being fans of that."
"Capitalized words aren't allowed in Scrabble" was the first thing I thought when he put those letters down.
Olivia Pope has temporarily become a Shondaland version of Kerry Washington's character in Django Unchained. Didn't see that coming.
This was the first Archer reference that offended (okay, annoyed) me, having grown up on Avenue D, even though I knew they were referring to an Avenue D out of time, as FiveFingeredLeoWong suggests. (By the way, gentrifying people have been going past Avenue A to cafes, bars, galleries and clubs since the '80s, having…
His expression seemed to suggest that + grandfatherly possessiveness + a need for a paternity test. I love Mr. Howard.
You might be a prude.
"I don’t think anyone who works on this show has ever actually heard any hip hop…"
I wouldn't say I'm rooting for them, as I'm not Patrick's biggest fan, but I appreciate what the show is doing with them, And I like watching Russell Tovey in various states of undress, so there's that.
Kevin is screwing up, but he's totally relatable, especially to anyone in a relationship who has been tempted or succumbed to temptation. Which is most people, even if they don't want to admit it.
I've been on all three sides of that triangle. Being the homewrecker is the best – well, least complicated – position to be in.
Dick, he said, a very important distinction.
"According to Thompson, 'Vision Quest' is a shining testament to the genius of Reed, who not only serves as the showrunner of Archer but has also written nearly every episode of a series that’s midway through its sixth season. Whereas most comedy shows have a writers’ room packed with 10-15 scribes, Archer’s consists…
People watch this with commercial breaks?
"Throughout the course of the episode, it’s suggested that one of Archer’s most celebrated sayings—'PHRASING!'—is being put out to pasture. Reed acknowledges that this may be the last we hear of 'phrasing,' though it’s had a good run.
I sincerely hope Part Two contains the granddaddy of them all: Cole Porter's "Be a Clown" from The Pirate (1948) and Nacio Herb Brown and Arthur Freed's "Make 'Em Laugh" from Singin' in the Rain (1952).