avclub-85e55563b02a6928e531474f6eabbaa1--disqus
Kevin-94
avclub-85e55563b02a6928e531474f6eabbaa1--disqus

I pity anyone who only knows The New Yorker as a magazine referenced on a Seinfeld episode. It's been around for 100 years, far longer than the AV Club. And it has showcased some of the best American short fiction of the last three or four generations. Describing the New Yorker in terms of Seinfeld is like saying

Melvin and Mario Van Peeble in Badassss and the Sheens in Wall Street.  Also, Robert Downey Jr often acted with his father.   And how about an inventory of people who aren't related but are well cast as family members?  (Sara Gilbert as Rosanne's daughter.  Bill Hickey as John Spenser's father.  David Hyde Pierce as

Will Toby Jones play Mr. Rogers in one of them?  He always seems to pop up in movies that have "twins," like Hitchcock, Titanic and Capote.  

"Holidays of Future Past" does not feature Jenda.  That episode only establishes that Bart has an ex-wife.  Jenda never appears on screen, and Bart's ex-wife's name is never said aloud.  For all we know, "Holidays of Future Past" represents an entirely different time stream than "Future Drama."  

I'm surprised that AV Club's only understanding of "Guys and Dolls" is that it was parodied on The Simpsons once.  If there was a new CD of Beatles greatest hits coming out, would AV Club say "A new commemorative CD of songs by The Beatles, memorably parodied as The B-Sharps on The Simpsons, is coming out.  I wonder