avclub-a43012a332fc066e7ecf57a9b678fb51--disqus
Unregistered4Life
avclub-a43012a332fc066e7ecf57a9b678fb51--disqus

Book readers: worse than Nazis.

It's not the characters that we'll miss so much as The North. Remember the show started in the North, that's home base for the audience to identify with, they were the good guys and the only ones you were really rooting for in the war (Danerys doesn't really count yet).

The main difference is the WGA website probably never reprinted The Av Club's lists and went "who do these assholes think they are making a list?"

To be fair, that was the richest part of Manhattan he blocked off. Millionaires getting punked by billionaires is hilarious, if I was a billionaire that's all I'd ever do.

Where have you been? O'Neal regularly snarks on the very idea of people doing something as trivial as reporting on pop culture. I'm pretty sure there have been newswire posts snarking on how everyone's so snarky nowadays.

I wonder how much hazing you have to go through before you get the staff box beside your name.

The funny thing is, I'll bet you at some point Real Irwin has made a comment about how sophisticated he is for watching Game of Thrones or Community, and how he pities the lowbrows and their Big Bang Theory. It's always the dumbasses who are the snobbiest.

@disqus_ngu6Yzuu3T:disqus 
You'd never heard of Das Boot? Really?

I thought Philip Seymour Hoffman in Mission Impossible 3 did a good job of making evil frowning and grumpiness seem scary.

If the internet got to cast things every British character would be played by Idris Elba, every Batman villain would have been Johnny Depp, and Nathan Fillion would play all other roles.

Brendan Gleeson's been suggested before, and it was a good suggestion.

You're joking, but that would be an amazing choice. I seriously hope that happens now.

Maybe it's ridiculous to call anyone the greatest stand-up of all time, but if you were to call someone that, it would have to be Pryor.

@avclub-1eba9b4a9af24d47bdc5f3274fb227a1:disqus 
Haha, you almost got me, midwestspitfire. I read your comment and genuinely thought "well, this commenter loves this show and has quotes from other people who love it, maybe it does have a cult following outside Todd VanderWeff". I was on the verge of re-evaluating my

These season 4 apologists go too far. Better than the original series? You got straight to hell Joe Propinka.

This is what I hate about it. It's not really the racism. It's that it's apparently un-American to think that my opinion that he doesn't say Earf is better than someone else's opinion that he says Earf. But it's not an opinion! He doesn't say Earf. I'm right and you're wrong.

It's the pop culture version of the birther movement.

I have no problem with his tv club reviews being as effusive as he wants. But when he titles this article an interview with the creators of one of the greatest tv shows of all time, it's disingenuous. Like when reporters ask questions like "how would you respond to people who say x and y" as if it's not the reporter

My opinion: the "welcome to earf" joke, based as it is on the racist idea Will Smith didn't pronounce Earth properly in the movie even though he did, and given the fact that it's gotten spread around so much people think it's true and even when they find out it's not they still keep saying it cause it doesn't even

Saying "one of tv's greatest shows" makes it sound like there's some kind of consensus that this obscure Canadian dramedy was a milestone in television like The Sopranos or the Wire, when in fact hardly anyone's ever heard of it. Title should have been "one of my favourite shows" or "one of tv's most underrated