avclub-9556df5fa4ed5b8ab5940c1638b61d23--disqus
Rosalie
avclub-9556df5fa4ed5b8ab5940c1638b61d23--disqus

Oh, I like Eric Wareheim. I also like the physicality of his performance and him being so big next to Ansari. I hear what you say about the character but I actually enjoy it. I don't see it as fake. He's his own person, he is a modern dandy. Regarding Wittels, I don't know if I would have liked it better, I just know

Do you mean Arnold? I like him, and I like their friendship. Harris Wittels was originally supposed to play Arnold and I wonder what the character would have turned out to be.

Yes, the Thanksgiving episode is one of my favorites this season. It's sweet and funny. The last shot, the high angle shot on the family table, with the big group laugh, was so well done. And the friendship. Friendship is a big deal in Master of None and I like that it just exists and doesn't necessarily need to be

I just finished season 2. And I have to say, this season, and Ansari in particular, really moved me. I'm so happy he and Alan Yang came up with this show, I'm happy that he's this confident leading man, the kind of leading man we don't see anywhere else. It was a beautiful, smart, human season, filled with ideas,

“Love was never anything more than lust, with a good marketing campaign”. I don't know if it's because I still associate Moss with Peggy Olson, but after hearing this, I immediately thought of Don Draper's "What you call love was invented by guys like me, to sell nylons."

I like the dynamic of that final montage with the Josh Ritter's song. Homecoming, indeed.

I'm not sure I understand your question. But I know I posted this comment in reaction to the Stray Observations in this review, so it makes sense to me. And the review for episode 3 hadn't been posted yet.

Oh, I agree. I just think that this is where they're headed.

I think he called his lawyer and asked him for the number of a good private investigator, or something like that. And to me, it has something to do with Jo.

Hmm, yeah. Let's be cautiously optimistic.

It's Six Feet Under's Alan Ball. So yeah, there's hope.

Oh, I agree with you. I think I remembered it precisely because it was so unusual to hear anyone mention a sitter or a kid.

She mentioned the babysitter in the last scene last week. But still, the kids thing is not handled very well.

For an Alan Ball show, with Holly Hunter.

Also, Alex is going to find Jo's husband, right?

I'm sure they're kicking ass. In my mind, they are, anyway.

As much as I would love to see all these characters again, those seven seasons were so perfect to me, I would not want to be disappointed by a reboot. Also, Matthew Weiner doesn't seem like the kind of showrunner who would want to revisit. But if he was the one to do it, of course I would watch.

I don't know about the ending. I thought it was a much needed bit of catharsis. And I liked the final shot very much. It made me think of this beautiful and powerful shot, in the fifth episode of Big Little Lies, where the three women run on the beach together, set to Death in Vegas. It gave me chill when I watched