It was only those of us who watch the show through not-so-legal means.
It was only those of us who watch the show through not-so-legal means.
@kencosgrove:disqus That sounds like being stuck in an episode of Glee to me.
@avclub-1881baeccb7399f3452cd7f37cdb2b29:disqus Eh, we don't know that yet. Like I said, it's a good first effort, it has some problems, but it shows signs of improving. It just seems that due to the backlash this statement can't be seen as ambivalent as it is.
this could be the best crossover ever.
I no longer know the term "the worst", I only know "joffrey".
Haha, my stream had that too. I spent at least 30 seconds wondering if it was a movie one of the characters were watching, until "Lifetime" popped up in the corner.
As soon as he went to the mirror I yelled, "NO. Big mistake, man!"
Oh man, that confused me so hard. I imagine this guy, slowly recording the episode to his computer. Maybe he's afraid, what with putlocker and sockshare being threatened in recent days. But no, he soldiers on, sure of his mission. Only to turn around and see that his mom has changed it to Lifetime during the…
Both are great, but remember, a bad shroom trip is like being in a musical you don't want to be in.
I liked it. It let each person's day take place in a vacuum and isolated each character for the viewer. Plus, I think it made Roger's final line about how it's going to be a beautiful day especially poignant.
Perfect episode. Just perfect. Roger and Jane on LSD, everything Peggy. The LSD scene was so beautiful.
It was all one day. First they showed Peggy's day, then backtracked to show how Roger inspired the spontaneous Draper vacation. This showed Roger's day, then it backtracks again to show us what the Drapers did. It ends on the next day, with Roger saying it's going to be a great day right after finalizing his plan for…
@avclub-1881baeccb7399f3452cd7f37cdb2b29:disqus I think we do know where Louie is coming from. It's one person, but they make the motivation behind his actions quite clear. And Mad Men has been on the air for awhile but it set up the inner discomfort of Peggy, Don, and most of their characters in the pilot.
I know, I just don't buy that.
I'm not saying the show needs laughter, just that I found those two moments genuinely amusing.
@avclub-1881baeccb7399f3452cd7f37cdb2b29:disqus But, the characters aren't really being studied? I guess they are, but to me it hasn't been explored in a way that isn't completely stereotypical. Nerdy Girl who likes Kelly Clarkson, pink, and Sex in the City? She's a virgin! Foreign Girl who's flaky and undependable?…
I'm a girl and I like shows about girls and I've seen both episodes and I don't like the show.
I have this same problem with the show. People keep saying "the abortion showed their insecurities! It was such honest discussion!" But…it was one fairly interesting monologue by the girl having the abortion and her friends just kind of talking around it and really only caring to the extent that it affected them.
I was so angry with the girl who organized the abortion and Hanna's STD test. Hanna can't pick up a phone and make her own appointment? Foreign girl can't take care of herself? When Type-A girl was getting mad at the clinic I just wanted to shake her and say "This isn't even your responsibility. Leave if you're going…
If it's a dramedy, it needs more drama. Did anyone really think Hanna was going to turn up with HIV? Are we really concerned for Type-A girl who just needs to have an honest conversation with her boyfriend? and Virgin girl hardly counts as a character at this point.