Perfect capper to an already great album.
Perfect capper to an already great album.
Wallace and Gromit?
When I was a huge Garfield fan as a young boy, I remember my babysitter and I having a huge argument over whether Nermal was a boy or girl. We made a bet over it, and whoever was correct had to buy an ice cream sundae for the winner. I think Jim Davis had some sort of a fan email system at the time, so we emailed and…
I thought the humor, in addition, was balanced well with the emotional aspects, especially with some prime work for Milhouse and Chief Wiggum. I think that's what made "Holidays of Future Passed" work as well. Don't forget how the future template resulted in a truly awful episode when they removed the emotional aspect…
Before "Barthood", the portrayal of Bart has always been my least favorite aspect of the future episodes (even in Lisa's Wedding, a personal favorite). Not only did the writers make him out to be a bum as an adult, but he's a talentless and uninspired one as well. It always rubbed me the wrong way, and changed the way…
This article still makes me sad.
Welcome to the big time.
One of the perks of writing a Christmas standard? No matter how much your music career declines, you always become relevant again at this time of the year. Look at Mariah Carey or Michael Buble.
Thank you for speaking for me.
I went with my sisters, and didn't regret the trip. I thought it was remarkably slow-paced for a children's film (in a good way).
Have any children's books based off of "The Force Awakens" been released yet?
What? I just looked it up, and that's pretty funny.
I'm pretty sure that game was on Monday Night Football as well. Coincidence?
I like most of the animation between seasons 14 and 20, but I really despise the HD era.
I feel as though "I Love Lisa" is the only episode that takes him seriously because he hadn't been fully developed as the non-sequitur machine yet. I think that was the first episode to even focus on him.
What episode is that quote from?
Al Jean shared the link to this article on his Twitter page, and had something pretty funny to say about it.
With mine it was Homer singing Steve Miller's "The Joker" in "The Way we Was."
I was enjoying it until that abysmal third act. Using the "it's all a dream" device? No one thought that was a bad idea?
Once again, why aren't we covering, "All Singing, All Dancing?" Are you just going to say, "It’s really all you need to know" every time you feel like skipping an episode?