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avclub-91c36e90096e5b5b6d5de85077018406--disqus

What about Smee? What about Smee? Smee? Smee's me. I'm Smee!

On the one hand, that final scene was intense and well-directed by Michelle MacLaren. On the other hand, I wanted Rick to shoot Shane as soon as he shot Sophia. Shane has ascended/descended to outrageous villainy so quickly that I don't know why he's still on the show. I'm not particularly certain I even grasp the

We are now living in a world where Gabe is the funniest character in an episode and I…am just some good-looking guy.

I'm glad I'm not the only one who a) finds Carla to be obnoxious (even when I was a kid watching some late episodes, she rubbed me the wrong way) and b) was completely uninvested in whether or not Carla would have a job or if the bar would get in legal trouble. First of all, the whole thing with Big Eddy was

He's just SO CONTROVERSIAL.

This episode was good, but it wasn't Community being saved, so WHO CARES?

Why couldn't NBC make all-around shitty stuff? It'd be so much more fun to watch them collapse. This is just the worst.

If only for the sweetness of that ending, I liked this episode. Also, the "Oh, that's NICE!" refrain was great.

The funniest part of either episode for me—and I'd never seen them before—was the "He had to go to mime class" line from the first part of the pilot. Overall, I liked these episodes despite coming into this as a bigger fan of Frasier than of Cheers. The cast does seem well defined, and there's very little obvious

Is there any point when TV writers will assume two good-looking characters can just get together and move on from there? Free Agents can't be that big of a trend-setter.

For about one second, when Dale saw him, mouth wide open, I assumed that was what he was thinking. If only he'd said it.

As mentioned elsewhere, just for having Glenn do…you know, SOMETHING, this episode is an improvement on the last couple. And Shane looked like an overgrown hillbilly kid at the memorial service.

Also, was Pierce's "You're dead and I'm not" a reverse SNL reference? (Probably not, but that's what I thought first.)

I want Chevy Chase to say Wikipedia in his Pierce-y way every week. And for Troy and Abed to impersonate each other, all the time.

Clearly, Zooey Deschanel and Mr. Death Cab split because she couldn't say penis. (And I'm sure I'm the 50th person to say that in this thread.)

I didn't think it was as weak as you did, David, but last week's was a far funnier episode. That said, George triumphantly shouting "Fire! I think the rat is on fire!" was pretty great, as was Brett Gelman. Still, I hope we get at least one or two more episodes where George, Jonathan, and Ray team up for more than

That scared the shit out of me as a kid. I had forgotten the name of the special, so when I saw the Garfield show at the top of the list, I assumed it was the same one. Garfield's regular TV show was pretty damn dull, but some of the specials were Far Side-level weird.

While this was definitely the strongest episode of the season, IMO, I wish the twist about Shane and Otis hadn't been teased out with the in media res opening. Simply by showing me Shane shaving his head and looking like a feral animal in that opening scene, I kind of figured that Otis hadn't made it back to the farm.

I guess I'm just thrown by the twist with Andy. And I say "twist" because I'm not forgetting the moment in some other episode where Andy said he'd been going out with someone, right? More to the point, why does he feel such a need to tell Erin at this point? They haven't been too angsty this year, outside of our past

If only Breckin Meyer wasn't hanging with Franklin. Or Bash. Whichever one he's not.