Wasn't the last Road Rules in like 1998? I just assumed all the contestants would have turned up dead in filthy motel rooms years ago.
Wasn't the last Road Rules in like 1998? I just assumed all the contestants would have turned up dead in filthy motel rooms years ago.
Along with all the issues Zack pointed out, I'm disappointed that we haven't really seen Jax run the club. With Jax at the helm, they had a chance to show all of the established SAMCRO characters interacting in completely new ways. We could have seen whether Jax would run things differently, whether the Clay…
Along with all the issues Zack pointed out, I'm disappointed that we haven't really seen Jax run the club. With Jax at the helm, they had a chance to show all of the established SAMCRO characters interacting in completely new ways. We could have seen whether Jax would run things differently, whether the Clay…
Now, how would you feel if he actually took your advice, John? We'd have a well-made horror show for a few years, and eventually we'd get sick of it and it would just fade away.
Now, how would you feel if he actually took your advice, John? We'd have a well-made horror show for a few years, and eventually we'd get sick of it and it would just fade away.
Google seems unstoppable now, but has Microsoft tried slipping chemical weapons and explosives into their offices? Because that's Heisenberg's business model— he won't waste years fucking around with frivolous patent claims.
Google seems unstoppable now, but has Microsoft tried slipping chemical weapons and explosives into their offices? Because that's Heisenberg's business model— he won't waste years fucking around with frivolous patent claims.
I'd settle for some Zack Morris-style stopping time and breaking the fourth wall.
I'd settle for some Zack Morris-style stopping time and breaking the fourth wall.
I think Walt tries to turn the Arizona crew into his new distro network. They have capital, connections, and guns, and most importantly, they apparently admire Walt's work almost as much as Walt does.
I think Walt tries to turn the Arizona crew into his new distro network. They have capital, connections, and guns, and most importantly, they apparently admire Walt's work almost as much as Walt does.
That's how it would work on just about any show, but at this point I think Breaking Bad is just going to refuse to work the way other shows do. I'm not even sure the ricin cigarette is ever going to serve another plot purpose. Walt doesn't keep the ricin because he needs it— he keeps it as a symbol of what he's done…
That's how it would work on just about any show, but at this point I think Breaking Bad is just going to refuse to work the way other shows do. I'm not even sure the ricin cigarette is ever going to serve another plot purpose. Walt doesn't keep the ricin because he needs it— he keeps it as a symbol of what he's done…
Greatest Misses is one of my favorite episodes. Sure, it tends toward the juvenile and incoherent, but I see it as the funniest jokes from a bunch of sketches that probably couldn't sustain that level of humor for more than a couple of minutes.
Greatest Misses is one of my favorite episodes. Sure, it tends toward the juvenile and incoherent, but I see it as the funniest jokes from a bunch of sketches that probably couldn't sustain that level of humor for more than a couple of minutes.
1. The gay landscaper might have been the funniest thing ever.
2. I'm amazed that, only eight years ago, it didn't really occur to me that their depiction of gay stereotypes might hurt or offend anyone.
1. The gay landscaper might have been the funniest thing ever.
2. I'm amazed that, only eight years ago, it didn't really occur to me that their depiction of gay stereotypes might hurt or offend anyone.
My sixth-grade class somehow scammed our culturally oblivious teacher into showing this for a classroom party. And since he spent most of the afternoon smoking outside, we saw the whole thing. Not my first R-rated movie, but the best to that point.