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avclub-9621bf642a356f5698546a5902246d4f--disqus

I got back into Indian cinema in a major way after watching The Lunchbox, finally. Loved it. It made me think about where my life's going (which is always good, because my life's kind of in flux right now), it also made me love Nawazuddin Siddiqui even more than I did previously. I wish India had sent this one to the

It's so strange that next week will be the finale. This season went by incredibly fast.

I need Robin. I need Robin and Cary. Just talking about pizza.

It is a bit frustrating for us viewers, because it's true Peter and Alicia have throughout their relationship focused on keeping up appearances and not talking things out. Even that post-Will's death argument was pretty weird. It seems to me like Alicia doesn't truly care about Peter, now that she's understood her

In a creepy way that made me think of Jon Gabrus' character on Broad City.

I'm definitely thinking separation as well. A miscarriage is a tough thing to go through, and even if the separation was initiated by the wife, Eli would be right to be concerned it doesn't "look right" in public. Especially if the wife is still in New York while he's in Chicago.

I did a double take seeing the word "mölkky" on the AV Club, out of all places. Oddly enough, I grew up playing petanque, a French lawn game my dad loved (referred to all Finnish-like as 'petankki'), and only discovered mölkky when I was 18.

I don't live in the US and I've noticed that I'll visit some friends in New York every two-to-four years and learn about what they're eating, and about two years later everybody in my country will be fussing about it. It's really weird, because with the rise of foodblogging online and people knowing English all over

I thought I was straight but I guess I'm just really whimsical and quirky.

We've all met that guy at a party who can't stop talking about Stuart Little 2, and yeah, it's good, but is it really that good?

But there's a Boondock Saints 2, which complicates matters.

There's a lot of variation in fan-run podcasts about wrestling but I'm always on the look out for things that don't devolve into pointless endless whining about this, that and the other, but rather talk about the flaws but also highlight what actually makes people fans to begin with. The overwhelming negativity in

Judge Jesse Thorn is no Judge Hodgman. Why must you lie to me, podcast feed. Why.

The whole podcast was built on a pretty asinine premise, IMO. We all know why a single-issue shock story about a cute animal gets more coverage than complicated large scale human rights issues. People and media can bring up and be horrified about animal abuse and can think up a solution in a second, and even take a

Linda's annoyance at Glen's impossible quiz was so funny to me.

I really need to watch all of Review. The first episode was brilliant.

On last week's TUAPCW (mouthful!), Destroy Him My Robots gave me a brilliant soft landing into the warm side headlock of NJPW and Japanese professional wrestling. I spent pretty much most of my free time before Easter watching their recent events and can confirm that I'm head-over-heels in love with Shinsuke Nakamura,

I don't think any DJ is hot enough to go to Spain for, other than for the fact you get to go to Spain, so basically it's a movie about girls going to Spain because they mostly just want to go to Spain, which I'm actually very much okay with.

But then we wouldn't have "fictionalized law cases ripped from the headlines" type of story arcs in some of the more filler-type episodes. They may not always be superb TV but they're still one of my favorite amusing parts about The Good Wife.

As a huge fan of the show who recently rewatched most of S1, I have to agree - the first season and half of the second season, I'd say, is where the show takes a premise and builds on it on a consistently good manner but it's not the best show on the planet at that point. Then the main character kind of comes into her