I called the true love fakeout/Hans is the real baddy early in the first act. /Iamverysmart
I called the true love fakeout/Hans is the real baddy early in the first act. /Iamverysmart
That story reminds me of Patton Oswalt's old bit about having a pregnancy scare, considering having a kid, and then going to Wal-Mart one afternoon. They ended up not having a kid.
I sincerely doubt that PwC (or any of the Big Four) would have any trouble with existing or potential partners (they don't really "recruit" partners) if they somehow forced out a partner for cause.
They're both still at PwC. If I'm not mistaken, they're both partners in the firm. You can't really "fire" partners and their value to the firm far outweighs any temporary public embarrassment they caused.
Hollywood accountant here to say that your relative (Deloitte?) is grossly exaggerating the consequences of this screw up. It's publicly embarrassing to PwC but none of their clients are going to rethink their relationships because of it.
They didn't lose their jobs, i.e. they're still working at PwC. They're just not working the Oscars anymore.
I don't think she ever considered Ray to be a "real" boyfriend. She said herself that he was just supposed to be the guy who was so grateful to be dating her that he would do anything she wanted.
I realize they're trying to wrap up the series but, except for Hannah's crushing phone call with Riz Ahmed, this episode was badly written.
I'm guessing at this point she's had TV offers/pilots but they either don't go anywhere or she turns them down because she doesn't want to do TV. She's had several lead film roles at this point. I figure she doesn't want to get tied down on a network TV show. It's also hard to imagine a good fit for her sensibility…
In last week's episode, we were asked if we would prefer to see more of Pete's personal life (i.e. Lauren Lapkus) or professional life. I was in the 'personal life' camp then and this episode changed nothing, despite the delightful presence of Sarah Silverman and co. It just makes me ask once again what was Pete…
I liked it a lot, mostly based on the cast and the 'backstage of struggling comedians' setting that Crashing is currently whiffing on. But Don't Think Twice is improv, not sketch. It's apples and oranges.
What if a popular male comedian comments on it and video of that goes viral years later?
Ha! I love Heather Morris. Didn't know she was on too. But this is even more ridiculous. Are the judges going to judge the professional dancers/figure skaters/martial artists on a tougher scale? Or is most of the field just fighting for 3rd place?
I don't know much about Dancing With the Stars but I do know that Chris Kattan and Mr. T are on this year. Is it really fair to have an Olympic-level figure skater competing in a dance contest with non-Olympian celebrities? Did they give Yamaguchi a handicap or anything? Or did she win in a blowout?
On the comedy career vs. personal life front, I'm leaning more towards personal life, which is kind of surprising to me, for two main reasons.
Given recent real world developments, I wonder if the "better than Uber" conversation takes on connotations that are different from the writers' intentions. Uber is probably a lot more vulnerable to competitors these days than they were when the scene was written.
They'd get their wages garnished til the day they die.
You forgot the product placement. Audi needs a car chase (their cars can't crash though) and the team needs to meet at McDonalds.
She's been running for a while with all of the corrupt business deals circling Trump. She also has a "send it to Maddow" site for whistleblowers/leakers to send stuff to that she regularly mentions.
I'm hoping that if they're at all relevant and not a big bait and switch (I trust Maddow's integrity enough that I doubt it's that) that she posts them online in full, damn the consequences.