The dream died with Daughtry
The dream died with Daughtry
I think the outlandishness helped. It got nothing out of me (the only AD to do that was the one with Stan's dog), but for a show that typically lacks any emotional core, something like this episode could be jarring and effective.
I mean, this got lost in all the shuffle, but he got me to finally watch a lot of movies when they appeared on Instant
Also, just going to add that the last documentary (A Skin, A Night) was really messy, hard to watch, and "artistic" in the worst way
For everyone who hasn't heard it, a live recording of "I Need My Girl" from a few years back. http://www.youtube.com/watc…
England
Bloodbuzz Ohio
Fake Empire
Geese of Beverly Road
Abel
Brainy
90-Mile Water Wall
All the Wine
Lemonworld
Wasp Nest
We post on an internet where "STILL A BETTER LOVE STORY THAN TWILIGHT" is a comment on every video
If this is what we're doing…
What? The Pogues released more than 5 albums?
I know they didn't write it, but their version of "The band Played Waltzing Matilda" always struck me in much the same way. It isn't quite as a majestic as "Brown Eyes" but it has this strained, depressing quality to it, especially as it draws on and on towards its finish.
Like Jack Warner calling Bonnie and Clyde a "three-piss picture."
Movies aren't lawn equipment tho
Picking Bossanova over Doolittle tho
I was gonna say something about how Breaking Bad has actively tried to paint Walt as among the worst of his type of people, but then I remembered he's still viewed as the hero by a certain subset of fans.
but the THEME SONG
Pretty sure even in Last Airbender there was some Philly action
This isn't the fucking Emmys
This isn't the fucking Emmys
I don't recall season 6 of Lost getting much love, though that may just be because I hated it and my perception is colored.
You can't totally compare it to Mad Men and the Sopranos because they are cinematic in their presentation, rife with ambiguity and visual metaphor. The Wire, on the other hand, is anything but ambiguous. It's basically documentary-style fiction, and yes, it is focused pretty much wholly on underlining the problems…