avclub-854ade243192b6462c3882ec2d6f096b--disqus
taalibba
avclub-854ade243192b6462c3882ec2d6f096b--disqus

Dude, that's weird. I'm watching Lovelace and you said Seth Cohen and then he just appeared onscreen. You're a wizard.

I like that idea. #2 is Breaking Bad as a whole, #1 is Bryan Cranston specifically.

Boring young love triangles aside, I'd put it firmly in the pleasant surprise category.

Hey, I lived in the dorms in my late 20s, no one cared. Its entirely possible they were all talking behind my back but aside from the occasional "Really? I thought you were 19" comment it never came up.

One could argue that he learned that sex has the power to change the way people see you.

Agreed. I thought the whole point of Sylvia was that they made Linda Cardellini up to be maternal enough to be an explicit commentary on Don's mommy issues. She's not exactly the same young, almost societal norm defying gorgeous brunette he's always found. And I never saw that much chemistry between them. I think

I like him, but that is so very true. However I did enjoy that him saying that (and getting nerdily excited to the point of hyperventilation at this theory) led to Craig Ferguson confessing "Wow…it's been many years but I'm feeling a strong impulse to kick your ass"

Well December 10th does leave enough shopping days that someone could presumably watch it and say "Ooh, I want that!" and have the person they're watching it with get it for them. Other than that and the nebulous concept of Angels I'm not sure what's holiday about it.

Fergie as Anita? I could see that.

And he's found no fun in the future so far. No, I get what he was saying I'm just sure I've heard "irony is the national pasttime" in those exact words thrown around on sites like this one. It seems very topical and it threw me off coming from him.

"When did irony become a national pasttime?" 1994, I suppose, but that still strikes me as an odd thing for Ichabod to say. That's a sentence we use in thinkpieces about needing seven layers of irony and meta to be entertained and not being able to process a simple story anymore.

Or to one homophobic co-worker who was mean to her friend 7 seven years ago?

Seriously, how is he not already on this show?!

Seriously, in a car wreck? With someone else behind the wheel? The gods have a sick sense of humor.

He was so very good in Pleasantville.

Not that much power, but can carry a tune and is pleasant to listen to. Basically he's got a nice little voice, but how many movie musicals have revolved around actors with nice little voices?

*pats bangs protectively* You shut up…they look great on me.

I haven't read the comics so I've never known and never remember to ask this: was the whole Magneto as Holocaust survivor thing invented for the movies, or has that always been part of his backstory?

I've never wanted to reach through a screen and pat a character on the head more than Kenna during most of this episode. Particularly after "They're my chambers too now, because….the king and I are in love!" That's nice, sweetie. Henry doesn't seem unusually evil and probably won't have you beheaded when he gets

I actually thought this a really promising episode, with a great guest star and any amount of character development, backstory or additional emotions for Agent Big McLargehuge is good.