avclub-a58a5404c839a0db9181d5d4ac2c3939--disqus
zoax
avclub-a58a5404c839a0db9181d5d4ac2c3939--disqus

I still feel that he's first looking at Jeff, then Todd, but I'm going to go ahead and defer to your authority on this one LloydBraun.

Interesting bit of shipper trivia: I went to Donald Glover's show at UChicago and after the show he did a little Q + A. One question was "If you were to pick a member of the group to date, who would you pick?" and he pretty easily picked Britta.

About Michael K. Williams: he's clearly capable of comedy. He had plenty of funny moments in The Wire (Honey Nut, etc.). But a lot of those depended on Williams' bad-ass charisma as Omar. I feel like he's kind of restrained here. Perhaps he'll go full-Omar when he inevitably leaves, as these teachers always seem to.

I actually don't think Abed is looking at the camera when he says "audience appeal". If you think about the scene, he actually seems to be looking at Todd.

But, just going off these reviews, all of the jokes in Whitney seem very, very old and worn out. "Dudes don't like to listen to girls talk" has been done to death. How can you laugh at something you've seen so many times before?

Even though I'm a math major, I think most students are forced to learn too much math. Frankly, with the careers and interests that most people will have, most people would be better served learning statistics/finance/history than even pre-calculus, let alone calculus. Sure, trigonometric functions can be somewhat

When Britta gives her little speech to the study group, the white board behind Annie and Shirley reads "Enjoy your time here and make good use of your time". Has this always been there or do I just have Community's mortality on the brain?

What network would run Louie in syndication, though? Nick at Nite?

I don't want to know what will happen to the users of this site if Dane Cook's show somehow pushes out Community.

I know that people have different comedic tastes, but what bothers me is that there's just so much out there in the vein of Big Bang Theory or Two and a Half Men. Those are just typical sitcoms, and they're very, very similar to the sitcoms that came before them. If you want more stuff like Two and a Half Men, you've

I do wonder about Michael K. Williams' commitment to Boardwalk Empire, though. Before the season a lot of people said they'd have him for three episodes. So doesn't that mean Kane has to somehow get removed from the show after three episodes or not appear in several?

As a fan of this show who wants it to keep doing weird stuff for as long as it likes, does anyone know how online views factor into whether or not a network keeps a show? I once read an article (which I can no longer find) that argued that watching a show online (through Hulu or, in this case, nbc.com) is for most