avclub-83aa3f196953561a61735e0555f77b7e--disqus
L-o-l-a
avclub-83aa3f196953561a61735e0555f77b7e--disqus

In all fairness to his intelligence, it is extremely difficult to pull slightly shrunk leather pants back up one's sweaty legs.

Yes, @avclub-fae3f74829aeb75a41a9b0fe98ef8c3d:disqus , the scene where Chandler, Ross, and Rachel have to fit that couch up the stairs is inspired. Ross thinks yelling, "Piv-aht!"over and over is going to magically make the couch bend in middle. And the had-it-up-to-here response from Chandler (Perry's delivery,

"I wouldn't say I've been missing it, Bob."

I love that Naked Eyes version! Ah, the lush synth-pop of the Olde Country…

Agreed. As a straight chick, I too appreciate the more form-fitting male swimwear of Bob Benson. And what's super annoying is that this same baggy-trend crap has never applied to women and girls. Girls have to be ogle-able in minimal coverage while boys run around flapping in the wind (that came out dirtier than I

Holy shit, it's all become clear: Abe, Bob, and probably whoever that guy played by Harry Hamlin is are all Cylons. Joan clearly is not.

Respectfully disagree, times infinity. Here's the problem I have with DH2. Here is an international airport sitting right next to the seat of power for the free world, where security and contingencies are like breathing.

Oh, Nic Cage, the hair, the hair…and the absent sideburns. So distracting, even more so than the same shit happening to the same guy twice.

You weren't the only one thinking Henry was sexy. People hereabouts thought him hitting on pregnant Betty was creepy ergo he must be a creep. I never took it that way. I thought his attraction to her, even as big as a house, showed that he saw something about who Betty is inside that certainly Don has never

^I can't possibly Like this enough, @J.P MPickleshitter.

Now Abe can go live with the smelly teen squatters we met when Betty went looking for Sally's friend in the city. He can then graduate to a hippy commune where everyone enjoys the last decade of free love before herpes.

Occasionally, Don will look at his children with a bewildered, almost surprised, fatherly pride. He had a moment like that when he took Bobby to see Planet of the Apes and he got the same expression on his face in this episode during the song.

Bob: sexy tight white/green swimming trunks. Oh, you speak true @avclub-0bba551b5f78d9e7647cd7bc006578fe:disqus ! I wish we could have men wearing those again. But nooo, it's all the long baggy b-ball shorts now, or cargo shorts, all turned into swimwear. Not cool, men's fashion industry, not cool.

Yep, Abe said the f-word as an adjective, based on the context, which has slipped my mind. But he was bleeped, well, silenced, for that part of his dialogue. Hoorah! Personally, I would've thought he'd break out that word after getting a bayonet to the solar plexus.

Is it just me or were there only men lined up for the speed shots? I didn't see them administering the drug to any of the women who, at least in the case of Peggy, are directly involved in the campaign. Is it the Boys Club because they thing only the men really need to be uber-productive or is it because they don't

These sound likely, @avclub-5855660034a74cfe0e5fc8d57d17f4ac:disqus . Also, it's possible that some clue attached to another aspect of the case will lead them to the physical location of the cage - a secret facility, a branch, a control center - and they'll stumble on it. I think any and all possibilities will lead to

Having the real President locked in a cage is a really cool opening for future heroics. Nikita is all about saving people, about restoration and rescue, about helping the lost and forgotten - which is a terrific aspect to her character. It should be balls-to-the-wall action if they have to cram Nikita's public

I loved the use of space in this episode, especially in how the two sides ended up. There's Amanda, in that luxurious room, tastefully appointed in warm neutrals, lots of empty space, room to move. Then, our ex-Division Scoobies: surrounded by exposed wires and tight grey metal framing. The industrial setting is

Amanda's backstory - the teen captive of a neuroscientist father - really helped us get a better picture of her form of crazy this season. It generated a tiny bity of sympathy but not enough to offset her delicious evilness.

I only recently realized that the dude who plays Birkhoff was the flamethrowing teen in X-Men, which makes his current Action-Guy moments that much cooler. It's great that these techies were arming themselves against a superior force and using the other aspects of their Division training to fight with their bodies and