avclub-ad8d3a0a0f0a084a97fad357c649438c--disqus
TheBigO
avclub-ad8d3a0a0f0a084a97fad357c649438c--disqus

The original VJs wrote their own book, "VJ: The Unplugged Adventures of MTV's First Wave", published in 2013.

Shh, you're breaking the media narrative that Pokemon Go is something for adults to freak out about.

Great job, YouTube person who posted this in 2006.

My daughter recently let me know that Gad is a high school forensics legend, having won national championships two years in a row. To me, that explains a lot — forensics is a competition where overacting is generally encouraged. The clips are interesting:

What "awkward rape questions" did Trebek ask Lara Logan? Sorry, I haven't seen the episode.

I find it annoying how these videos open with Fallon apparently turning on the camera. I'm pretty sure Fallon is faking that bit, since NBC cameramen are unionized and wouldn't allow him to do that.

The best Springsteen albums have always felt cinematic, and the length of this double album makes it even more like a great epic movie. When I listen to "The River" from start to finish, I inevitably wonder whether the character in a a song like "Stolen Car" is the same character from one of the earlier songs but a

Coincidentally, both songs feature Max Weinberg on drums and Roy Bittan on keyboards.

I like that better than this unfunny Twitter bot.

Well, the series was basically an absurdist play about waiting for someone who never comes. Her dad didn't show up until the last episode. (And yes I know that was Beckett, not Satre).

Playing "Holland, 1945" over "The Colbert Report" closing credits was apparently a tribute to his brothers, as explained here:
http://gawker.com/why-steph…

Goodnight Zoom.

Yes, GJI posted last summer about the Duplass brothers doing a cover of the HBO theme, and it linked to the making-of documentary.
http://www.avclub.com/artic…

Gleeson has an interesting comedic history. For the past few years he's been making his own sketch comedy YouTube videos to raise money for a hospice house in Dublin.
http://www.immaturityforcha…

and Brendan Coyle (Bates from Downton).

Both of which featured a Doctor Who star in a blink-and-you'll-miss-it-role.

Whitney's fantastic, of course, but Ricky Minor's arrangement does a LOT of the heavy lifting — the pop-friendly 4/4 time signature, the non-standard chord changes throughout, and finally that knockout 3-chord progression on the last word "brave". People heard his arrangement and felt like they were truly hearing the

Or an unmarried couple where the girl has a job and the guy doesn't do much of anything, yet everyone acts as if his opinions carry equal weight.