Canderous Ordo was Bob's co-worker? That's pretty cool.
Canderous Ordo was Bob's co-worker? That's pretty cool.
Great interview as usual, Will.
So, The Wire: Just like Fight Club.
Possibly my single favorite JL/JLU (or even DC Animated Universe) episode It's either that or (the very different) "Double Date."
Were the reviews really that bad? I seem to remember it being respectably, if not rapturously, reviewed. Also, I believe this is where Jamie Foxx made his leap from Sitcom Funnyman to Serious Dramatic Actor.
Well, you need something to break up the monotony of all those Michael Haneke films, right?
I would switch Blood and Chocolate with King of America. Also, the demo versions of most of the songs from Punch the Clock make you realize that they're actually pretty good, they're just buried under shitty 80s-style production on the final versions. So that would move it up to at least Mediocre.
Don't forget that they now carry the MST3K torch, too.
I refuse to believe there is a world, real or fictional, where Charlize Theron is jealous of Kristen Stewart.
Seriously. I need to go back and watch it again.
The Internet, condensed version.
You can't libel the dead, though, so I suspect their reasons aren't purely legal.
You and me both. I'm still reeling from seeing Roger in blackface.
I don't remember that; and since I do remember watching the original Project X in my fifth-grade class, I'm going to say no.
I just assumed he was talking about George W.
I know everybody hates Gary as a character, but we should really salute William Ragsdale for his performance. He totally sells Gary as a guy who's always wildly out of his depth—and knows it.
Did I hear a reference to "digging sang?" Kudos to the Archer writing staff for getting the Appalachian references so very right.
If it makes you feel better, your boyfriend probably feels the same way.
I agree, but only if we're talking about early-period Dean. At some point the writers just decided they hated the character (or the actor), and Dean got dumber and meaner each time he popped up on the show.
Seems like ABC's "Murder One" is the granddaddy of the modern serialized show, as it predated "The Sopranos" by a number of years. (Although nobody but me remembers it.)