The salaciousness and porno feel (no pun intended) really set in when Megan grabbed Don's balls. Has this move ever before happened in the history of the show?
The salaciousness and porno feel (no pun intended) really set in when Megan grabbed Don's balls. Has this move ever before happened in the history of the show?
I liked Betty in this episode the way I liked her when she hung out with the squatters in Greenwich Village - she steps out of her 1950s wife-mother role and, for just a moment, becomes a real person. Standing up for herself in that kitchen, to me, was symbolic because we've seen some of her lowest, loneliest moments…
Holocaust, yes - I got that exact vibe when Ginsburg said that the computer was "coming for us." He seemed to be linking the cold rationality of the machine with the inhumanity of a Gestapo squad showing up at your door in the middle of the night to take you away and lock you up. Which is pretty much what happened to…
Padme was a young, strong, healthy woman, living in a future world of medical miracles (hello, Darth Vader). She could pilot her own ship and swashbuckle with gusto, could run, leap, chase younger men, etc. And yet - as in every fucking medieval tale - she dies in childbirth. I mean, come the fuck on. The "mopey…
Wonderful. Best ensemble work the show's done in ages but still managed to keep focus on Mindy & Danny, in a terrific balance that never tipped. Also, I loved Mindy's last outfit: the dark pink polka-dot shirt, plaid tie, and tweedy jacket. That woman is adorable and also kinda my idol.
I don't know if anyone's already said this (Disqus annoys me and keeps disappearing the comments from the bottom of the screen and then bringing them back). But who the fargin' hell is taking care of Bear all this time. Where IS he? Does Lionel have him? I can't think of anywhere else he would be. They all went out…
Ironically, it was her shitbag ex-husband that called it the most true: don't set yourself up to once again be some guy's miserable wife. Victoria should just bang a long, tanned succession of pool boys and remain single forever. Why a woman who fights that hard for independence would want to saddle herself with…
Romano had two run-ins with helicopters. The second one was where it fell on him. The first encounter cost him an arm. It was bloody awesome, but not as much as watching Conrad get the full splatter treatment in this episode! (P.S. Glad it wasn't Nolan who ruined his suit because that attire was a thing of beauty.)
Oh thank God. I had that for supper last night.
Yes, it was Kahlua and he was probably thinking "Pfft, chick liquor."
I gotta pick three small nits: Leslie is newly pregnant in this episode, then jump 3 years into the future, and her twins don't look under three years of age in that scene. I'm no expert, but those kids looked about 4. AVCers with kids will know better than me, but I think they mighta sci-fi'd the Knope-Wyatt…
We don't, so prepare for a summer of rampant speculation.
I thought Bill was her dirt.
Every line yelled at Michelle Obama by increasingly freaked-out fangirl, Leslie Knope. "You're FROM Chicago. You love it!"
The forest moon of Endor!
I loved that the story was about mothers and lost children, without the idealism and cult of domesticity that normally accompanies such stories in the popular imagination. It's not like Sandra Bullock's character in Gravity or Ellen Ripley in Aliens where it catalyzes heroic action and/or cathartic healing. It instead…
I can't speak for episodes/seasons prior to the reveal of the Men of Letters lineage as it relates to the Winchesters but, when this narrative first started unfolding, I thought that they might be setting up the Winchesters to split along MoL lines, with Sam being the cerebral wing of the brotherhood, and Dean being…
Irony?
I recently watched a SyFy movie called "Swamp Shark" where the finale included reeling in the CGI alligator-y-hided shark thing into the propeller of an airboat and then flinging fake blood and flesh parts into the back of the head of the poor fat Asian fellow being yelled at to crank up the stick on the boat (which…
The 74 likes on your comment @cinecraft:disqus should tell you you're not alone in this. A lot of relating has been going on, inspired by your perfectly encapsulated visuals. The stacked-up dishes, especially. I often wonder how people who own dishwashers can tell when they're riding the trough instead of the crest.…