avclub-b2a1da123acbee8ada6d584671408900--disqus
MedbCruachan
avclub-b2a1da123acbee8ada6d584671408900--disqus

To be honest, I don't read most of the articles anymore, They're crammed with errors and typos. I usually skip right to the comments.

Because that's where P.G. Wodehouse murdered him.

Ah, thanks. I hadn't noticed that.

There are? I remember the speech about the other doors being boarded up and I don't recall them using another exit, but I could've missed it.

Hey, don't be too hard on yourself. It takes a lot of cleverness and paying attention to plan cattle raids. ;)

If you entered the red door from the room where Stanley was found it required the key. If you were going from the main house into the Stanley room (as the child would have) it was shown a couple of times that the door only had a slide bolt. Will mentioned that his son could "just barely" reach the slide bolt.

1. No, she wasn't. She couldn't sleep and went to the kitchen where she imagined food to comfort herself enough to go back to sleep. At least, I see no reason to disbelieve her explanation since she clearly wasn't asleep and didn't seem remotely startled to find herself in the kitchen.
2. Will originally broke into the

I've been watching all season, but I apparently missed why Schmitt and Cece can't live in her giant beautiful apartment together. Did they ever say why they're living in the loft with a zillion other people?

"Simple elegance"? "Grand metaphor"? Aren't these just buzzwords that dumb people use to sound important?

I had a friend who, at the end of college, decided that she would live in France for a year by herself, come home and marry her boyfriend, have one year of marriage with no children and start a photography studio, then have two girls, two years apart.

Like a lot surrounding Dan Harmon, I fail to see how him having a philosophical musing about a lazy writing habit makes it brilliant that he has said habit.

As much as I love your username (Bathsheba Everdene forever!), the comment, eh. My enjoyment of a show is independent of what I think of other shows. The fact that "Two Broke Girls" exists doesn't obligate me to like anything. I couldn't even watch half this season. Lampshading Shirley not mattering was boring and

But drawing attention to the fact that they never do anything with Shirley is the same thing as doing something. Being self-aware is the best and only concern!

As someone who also figured the kite would decapitate him, I'm just not going to agree that it was impossible to do so. The stuff about predictability as a criticism makes sense to me, though. I mean, mostly. Being able to tell it's a Dr. Seuss parody just involves understanding what you're seeing at the moment. It

Well, true, the title is not "The Day Bart was Decapitated by a Kite," but it does make it seem like there's something to do with shoulders, which pretty much means decapitation, and since the entire first part is about the kite it seemed pretty reasonable that the titular implication of decapitation would occur by

What would lead you to predict that, rather than … any of many other possible outcomes?

idiotking - On the other hand, do straight men routinely compliment a gorgeous woman-who-is-a-complete-stranger's physical appearance strictly in a "I enjoy the way you match colors and you chose an interesting silhouette" sense? Consider that maybe guys have started off that way before, but always escalate it if she

Or she stuck it in her pocket on autopilot or to be polite and didn't empty them all the way when she got home. You've never found a movie ticket stub in your pocket days later?

Of course not. Jasmine's still not a real character, and I would like to see her be one. I really wanted her to be the one to bond with Jabbar over how much having a baby can suck. She was his sole parents for over half his life and his primary parent for another couple of years. She should get a scene where she

Yeah, I assume they cast a kinda chubby, kinda unkempt guy to show that this is strictly platonic. Ray Romano aside, there aren't even background characters on this show who aren't 22-year-old visions of ethereal perfection.