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ItsOnlyCody
avclub-8c3f348513ccf819c79fc556597faf31--disqus

"Oh my god, for a second there, I thought that was a real airplane!"
"Come on, guys! Are we doctors or are we…dart doctors?"

"Oh my god, for a second there, I thought that was a real airplane!"
"Come on, guys! Are we doctors or are we…dart doctors?"

Yeah, I can definitely see that too. That's what's so great about "Louie"; any scenario Louie is placed in can go in any direction. I was viewing it as despair because I know that Louie will realistically not end up becoming a successful talk show host in the long run of the show. I like your point about the regret of

Yeah, I can definitely see that too. That's what's so great about "Louie"; any scenario Louie is placed in can go in any direction. I was viewing it as despair because I know that Louie will realistically not end up becoming a successful talk show host in the long run of the show. I like your point about the regret of

The piece of music playing during the second half of Marshall's pitch to Louie is possibly the best score I've heard all year. ("Louie" in general has possibly the best original music of any television show right now.) It really added tension and got across the menace of Marshall, and the despair that Louie was

The piece of music playing during the second half of Marshall's pitch to Louie is possibly the best score I've heard all year. ("Louie" in general has possibly the best original music of any television show right now.) It really added tension and got across the menace of Marshall, and the despair that Louie was

This one was in "good not great" territory for me for a good chunk of the episode. Then Brad Dourif showed up and took things to a whole new level. "Wilfred" has been nailing the suddenly serious third act this season (the break-up with Amanda, revealing the truth to Jenna). I'm very excited to see how things play out

This one was in "good not great" territory for me for a good chunk of the episode. Then Brad Dourif showed up and took things to a whole new level. "Wilfred" has been nailing the suddenly serious third act this season (the break-up with Amanda, revealing the truth to Jenna). I'm very excited to see how things play out

That would be a great idea if Murphy & Falchuk turned over showrunning duties to James Wong & Tim Minear. Let them create new characters & a new setting. It has the potential for something awesome in the right hands.

I'm torn. This was, for me, easily the strongest episode yet in the way it balanced the flashbacks and Storybrooke scenes in a way that felt dramatically satisfying. I actually gave a crap about what Graham was going through. But then he goes and dies, getting rid of one of the few interesting characters in order to

What else can one say? You summed up my feelings for this episode, and the show in general, perfectly. I really enjoy the way you write reviews, Todd. They are all unique and you interact with each show in such a creative way.

Sorry to also play the comparison game, which I guess isn't fair, but if we're talking terms of pure quality of this season, the fact that Community's fate is up-in-the-air, while The Office is safe is just perplexing.

It was okay. The show seems to be finding a better tone for the flashbacks slightly with each week. My main problem with the episode though was that it didn't seem to spotlight Robert Carlyle enough. This would have been a great opportunity to give Rumpelstiltskin/Mr. Gold a lot more depth, but the majority of the

While this show is still pretty bad, the Halloween episodes were a step up, most likely thanks to James Wong and Tim Minear being the writers. Some of the dialogue is still atrocious though ("I will not be a victim of extortion!") and Dylan McDermott in general is just crap.

AHS is a great definition of car crash television. I have no idea why I keep watching. Maybe so I can properly complain, or dream of how many ways this could be a halfway decent show with a better creator at the helm. As it stands now, I'm getting the feeling Ryan Murphy doesn't really know what human beings actually

Really enjoyed this one, and the sense of continuing the theme of the study group's worst qualities overtaking them, which I liked that they touched upon aside from just Todd's speech at the end. One being with Sgt. Nunez giving his reasons for quitting; in the past 2 seasons, Chang's craziness was supposed to be

Yes, thank you. I wasn't making up that assumption. Just stating what Harmon said, and speculating as to how that's been implemented so far.

Upon watching the episode, I found the slight broadness of Annie and, specifically, Britta was a little odd, but on deeper thought, it seems to fit the theme set up last week for the season. Much like Jeff's persistence to appear laidback & cool led to him attacking the study table with an axe and appearing crazy to