Jon Stewart has never been a great interviewer, and he's especially dismissive of pop culture people. He's not going to sit across from a Kristen Stewart-type five nights a week and ask her what she's been doing lately.
Jon Stewart has never been a great interviewer, and he's especially dismissive of pop culture people. He's not going to sit across from a Kristen Stewart-type five nights a week and ask her what she's been doing lately.
Yes, but all of the little promotional tricks by Netflix were ALLUSIONS to the show.
Walter from Fringe? He's not a psychiatrist. He is a mental patient, which is perhaps the source of your confusion. I believe he's actually a biochemist.
Yes. It's worth remembering that the first couple episodes of Breaking Bad had Walt running around frantically in his tightie-whities. It really eased the Hal-to-Walt transition. Good point about Russell, too.
@avclub-c1fe85b855c6d045b827f74a1e2c3fd7:disqus Chris O'Dowd's character in Bridesmaids was Irish. I remember because they never explained how or why he became a police officer in the States and it really bothered me.
I felt the same way. After the first season I thought, well, it's pretty, but there's not much there. But I kept up with the second season, and things were just kind of blowing up—Betty and Don's marriage, notably—and I thought it was so much more interesting.
Am I unusual in disliking "The Jet Set"? That's probably my least-favorite Mad Men episode of them all. Just seemed like all the boring Eurotrash beach house interaction didn't end up adding up to much. The next episode, "The Mountain King," when Don goes to stay with Anna Draper, is much better.
I love how mid-song Don whispers to Betty "Let's go now."
I'm rewatching the series right now, and I'm midway through season 3. Want to give a shoutout to Sal's arc in "The Arrangements." That's when he directs the commercial for the diet drink that parodies the opening to "Bye Bye Birdie." He does the whole song and dance there in his bedroom for his sad,…
I HATED "Threat Level Midnight." I feel like that level of whimsy is in opposition to everything that ever made The Office good. I also feel like it was trying to be Community.
And he's incredibly funny, and he and Jennifer Westfeldt have the prettiest dog. http://tinyurl.com/c69x25l
"No pills, no powders. If it grows in the ground, it's probably OK."
I only saw it last year—and I'm pretty uptight in general (I'm the Jeanie Bueller, not the Ferris), really, so you can all discount my opinion if you want—but what bothered me about Animal House was how fatalistic it was. There is literally nothing the guys in that movie care about. It seemed like filthy, dank…
Phil unplugs the toaster, walks away with it.
I love Ramis in Orange County, and also, I have a weird affection for him as Seth Rogen's dad in Knocked Up. He just seems like such an easygoing cool dude.
Fucking HMO bastard pieces of shit! Sorry.
I haven't seen Pi, but the Ghostbusters line is a reference to actual, crackpot philosi-science. http://en.wikipedia.org/wik…
"This reminds me of the time you tried to drill a hole in your head, you remember that?"
@avclub-68b739692fa849e6572ee31610a75750:disqus My sister and I used to do the Aunt Bethany lines, too! "Is Rusty still in the Navy?" "When did you move to Florida?"
I remember watching the 7pm Conans! It was around 2004, 2005.