If you need to have your social issues tackled via cartoon, then you should probably start reading books.
If you need to have your social issues tackled via cartoon, then you should probably start reading books.
My friend and I found it to be one of the best episodes in a while. I guess I'm outside of the hipster think-cloud. Faggooooots!
SNL's highest highs don't come close to touching South Park for me, but to each their own, I suppose.
Ha, I wasn't really attacking your comment so much as the show itself. Springing a stealthy, hooded, sword-wielding super-hero type with leashed zombies in tow to what was otherwise a straightforward 'normal people among zombies' show struck me as ridiculous beyond measure. It's one thing to see something like that,…
So I guess folks who hadn't read the comic should've assumed that all that had happened and what they were seeing wasn't one of the dumbest things they'd ever seen?
I can't be the only one that calls her, "Saruh Ween Calleeeeees" in a derisive Southern accent anytime I talk about her, can I?
"Well, you see, Chris, neither one of us is good at writing for television."
I can't listen to anything-Kulap. Too cheery, too shrill.
I'm sure it's been said, but Hardwick's the Seacrest of comedy.
Herschel: "Have a pregnant woman sleeping on the couch and a young boy on the floor while I sleep alone in a big bed? … You'll both sleep with me."
Grantland's Andy Greenwald summed it up better than I can:
If the show had ever made any attempt at showing a social regression or made a commentary on anything, then perhaps, but that's not what they do. To my mind, the show, thus far, hasn't had any point to make and just sorta moves from one angsty argument to the next with hollow characters (the black one's even named…
Even if the virus is somehow spread via zombie saliva rather than blood, there's no way for the characters to know that, so the carelessness continues to be very distracting.
I don't know why some people have to try so hard to rationalize bad writing. I'm fairly sure Lori's whining about not getting enough help with the dishes was because the writers wanted something for Lori to be upset with Andrea about, not because they're thinking about how a Southern cop's wife would be acting. …
Given the barn, shouldn't Maggie have came out of nowhere through the woods, galloping on horseback, to capture the zombie without harming it?
I really feel like only featuring 4-5 characters per episode would be a far better way to develop them as characters. Hopefully they stick to this format.
I would gladly rewatch any season of Breaking Bad at any time. Jesus Christ himself couldn't get me to rewatch a Walking Dead episode.
Kinda makes me think Herschell was a one trick pony veteranarian:
Am I the only one who finds Kulap grating? She's Aukerman's wife, I get that, but does she bring anything to the table besides endless and exhausting enthusiasm/optimism?
Wouldn't the walkers be more terrifying if it wasn't so incredibly easy to dispatch them? Andrea killed one in close-quarters with a screwdriver, Lori killed one last night that totally had the drop on her and Daryl killed one that attacked him while he was sleeping. We're supposed to be afraid of these things?