avclub-9f319422ca17b1082ea49820353f14ab--disqus
The Great Wolf
avclub-9f319422ca17b1082ea49820353f14ab--disqus

Ok, I'm just throwing out this because I've had a chip on my shoulder for the last 15 years. The mention of going to the "Ted-Robin Well" too often reminded me of another instance where romantic "tension" ruined a show which also happened to be narrated by a first-person character looking back: "The Wonder Years".

Mr. Husk

"It'd probably work better if it wasn't crusty with cum…"

I'm Ruined!!!!
I was sure that staging a dumbed-down tour production of "Sex And The City" was worth the blood, sweat, tears and copious amounts of cash that I've thrown at it. I'll just have to go to my fallback production: "Macho Man" Randy Savage and Bruce Campbell headlining "Waiting for Godot". It's a reunion

I guess I always had the impression that if your mom likes it, it's probably not cool (for example: JibJab videos, LOLcats, etc.). Wouldn't Tom Hanks fall into that category somewhere close to Oprah and Clay Aiken?

Not denying that I have a fierce love of Pulp Fiction, I'd have to say that I think Forrest Gump's victory over The Shawshank Redemption is probably the greater crime, so far as judging the Academy Award as an arbiter of quality over more conventional filmmaking. Pulp rocks, but remains in some small part one of

Ooops. sorry.

But is there a cycle to acceptability?
But how many of these guilty pleasures will eventually come around again to be embraced by the hipster contingents?

Does it come around?
But how many of these guilty pleasures will eventually come around again to be embraced by the hipster contingents?

Star Trek III
You want an obscure, bizarre early crush? How about Robin Curtis, the actress who picked up the role of Lt. Saavik after Kirstie Allie decided not to reprise the role after Star Trek II. I even pored over the pages of a Star Trek novel dedicated to Saavik's early life. I had a moderately sheltered

OK, Irwin,