avclub-a3d5b5ccf5ff3d8ee29f791eeedaed55--disqus
jshie20
avclub-a3d5b5ccf5ff3d8ee29f791eeedaed55--disqus

That always bothered me because i was very proud of my geeky knowledge to identify everybody else.

Also he was one of the first villains she went up against mano e mano in the cartoon who wasn't a sentinel.

I'd say as good as. Not better though.

Sorry a tad before my era :/ ? - it's got the NCIS New Orleans guy in it right?

I feel they're all going to die horribly - time-travel shows just don't work on American network TV.

Cougar Town - now with less cougars (human or animal)

Basically any episode with the character called Root played by Amy Acker is generally a winner though.

PoI never had entire chunks that are must-watch - its the episodes that tie into the larger serialized nature that are much watch. The procedural episode of the week cases (mostly in the first 2 seasons and some in season 4) are where the show primarily struggles. So if you're willing to brave the occasional spoiler

I can't wait til the requisite sit-com weed episode - considering Kenny already has delusions, this'll be Hammy from Over the Hedge level of over the top!

Well "teen actor" by Hollywood standards in Shively's case who is 25 in the real world (not quite Jason Earles levels of ridiculous but still).

followed by the punch later in the episode "You whore!"

Any show that alludes to the future stretching on seems destined to die in a pool of irony!

This years Forever which was the year before's Tomorrow People.

with ABC going - Once upon a time in a long-forgotten Castle there was a Body of Proof that took Forever to be found in the Wicked City of Blood and Oil next to Nashville by Agent Carter and Galavant

There was also a movie not too long ago called Nightcrawler that had nothing to do with Bamfing.

TSR was part of the end of that live-action Disney era where there'd be some overly-shoved in moral dilemma that would leave me squirming uncomfortably in my seat (just with character actions, let alone bigger issues like what this article tackles). The era (round Raven's fourth season) was when Disney toned down the

My literature smells like computer chips!

Glee too? (sorta - the dream-sequence episode where the actor playing Artie stood up and walked around crushed me - why not have cast someone who actually was?)

Correction: *one sci-fi TV franchise had multiple characters.

It's a sit-commy type show - it takes time to grow but it's found a good groove by the back-half of season 1.