Or, alternatively, these are boy-band pop factory songwriters and they don't care if their songs mean anything and this song is no exception.
Or, alternatively, these are boy-band pop factory songwriters and they don't care if their songs mean anything and this song is no exception.
If by "is goddamn insufferable," you mean "makes me uncomfortably hard," then I agree.
Have you seen 20-somethings these days? Jesse looks as socially normal as he ever has.
Dexter used his portion of Harry's life insurance policy to buy the boat. (I made this up, but I'm sure that Dex got something out of his death.)
The closest Mad Men came to advertising being good was "The Carousel" when Don convinced himself how much he really loved his family. Soon thereafter he started fingerbanging Bobbie Barrett.
'Mad Men' is going to be the hallmark of university cultural studies departments for decades.
Chocolate lab is always everyone's first guess but she has no lab in her, based on DNA testing I did. She's an Alaskan Malamute mix who doesn't resemble that at all. She's short-haired, chocolate with white on her belly, 35 pounds at 9 months old.
This got really confusing for my dog that I happened to have named Hershey. It was in every other line and she kept looking up. She usually doesn't care for Mad Men.*
It also comes from a reminder of the last time he knew a secret about a co-worker and totally failed at using it as leverage in a proper way.
He did seem much less creepy now. Kind of a Daniel Radcliffe look going now.
That's just something the show did to us. For several seasons he was this farcical villain, but yeah, he's actually just a nice, regular guy. I don't think we had quite realized the extent to which Don is actually the villain.
Even Max Martin acknowledges that "I Want It That Way" means nothing. It's catchy as hell, but makes no sense.
MLK's assassination has to be coming up in the next episode, if they're going to use it. We're in late March, with Harry's reference to the Law Library occupation at Columbia. MLK died on 4/4.
Lenny Bruce would have been dead by then.
Was Rick's statement of "This is war" or whatever supposed to be surprising or series-changing? Have they not been at war for, like, 6 episodes now and failed to really do anything about it? This was a quarter of an episode stretched out into a full hour. Yawn.
I didn't pay attention to the "previously on" segment and when they took off the mask I had absolutely no clue who that was underneath it.
Yeah, I think a cooler ending would have been the reanimated camper staggering by the side of the road the same way he was at the beginning.
Season 3 really has to be split into two. The first half was awful, but the second half was the show at its best (with the last four episodes being its peak). If only Lost could be nothing but season finales, because every season was at its best at the end.
The numbers didn't show up until episode 18 of season one ("Numbers"). You obviously don't remember the show all that well. And if you look back on it, anyway, the numbers aren't really all that spectacular, crucial, or mysterious. They just are.
Since bodies aren't found in Dexter (with the exception of season 2), it will probably be reasoned that LaGuerta just ran for it to avoid the consequences of framing Dexter.