I don't know if this was deliberate, but there was kind of a rodent quality to the teeth. He looked like he could have been a character in Secret of the NIMH.
I don't know if this was deliberate, but there was kind of a rodent quality to the teeth. He looked like he could have been a character in Secret of the NIMH.
I actually already saw a review of Trials and Tribbleations vs. Flashback. Guess which the guy thought was better, more fun, and more respectful of the TOS crew?
I'm a little curious what the plan is with Trials and Tribbleations. It would fall as the second episode two weeks from now, but it's one of those episodes that might get the single article treatment. It's also one that's pretty stand-alone. If Zack is interested in tackling it by itself, my suggestion would be to…
It doesn't matter how many clicks there are per page, just click page down instead of using the arrow button.
I did read the article. But it was the AV Club who said that New York Magazine coined the term. I knew that New York Magazine cited its source.
New York Magazine didn't so much coin "grup" as much as they borrowed it from the Star Trek episode "Miri," in which Kirk & Co. find another duplicate Earth with all the grownups, "grups" dead from a disease that kills the biologically old. So, in a way, I almost think the term "onlies" would be more appropriate, as…
And Apocalypse Rising is the only season premiere that's not part of a mult-part season opener. That said, Season Seven's premiere is probably more low-key.
Indeed. It's not to be taken quite so literally. In fact, the Female Changeling pretty much gives us that clue by saying that "Cardassia is dead."
Okay, now imagine Jimmy Fallon doing a mashup of this and…I don't know Salute Your Shorts.
http://www.youtube.com/watc…
I could see Fallon doing a Lonnie Donegan impression at some point too.
I think it's not so much The Simpsons as it is him trying to mimic Letterman. I think he figures it's not fair that Letterman got to savage both of his networks and the audience loved him for it, in part because they always knew he was getting a raw deal at NBC, but when he does it people think he's a spoiled brat. …
Jay Leno: Cut the Dante reference. Nobody'll get that. Why don't you make it Joe's Famous Inferno?
Well he WAS kind of a cloudophobe.
I had Nick at Nite from 1989-1993, and in retrospect I think I preferred all of those shows to anything else that was on, although the Nickelodeon original programming was pretty cool.
This movie is great because both sides are so extremely intelligent, raising the tension much more than it would be in another movie.
Manhunt was awesome, maybe my favorite Fritz Lang movie. It's really entertaining and ridiculously over the top, especially the ending.
In the fall of 2000, my college screenwriting teacher said that "Restless" from Buffy the Vampire Slayer was the most realistic representation of a dream she'd ever seen on television. I was curious if it would appear here.
Hopefully the climax takes place on a fault line with a derailed train and a careening commercial jet converging on a farmer's house as he's about to light his stove.
I should rephrase, I don't mean that they get educated in Muggle history or culture, just that some of the analogous gen ed skill sets might be learned at an accelerated pace in elementary school. It's a half-baked theory anyway, but the kids do seem fairly articulate, at any rate.
I got the impression that the reason it might make sense for Raj to come out had less to do with his effeminate tastes, and more to do with the fact that he's kind of homophobic and makes comments that he thinks sound like jokes, but sound more like genuine attraction towards men. His behavior has struck me as that…