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She's crying as she does it. She clearly hates herself a little. It's not like the episode's moral was "Hey kids! Cave into peer pressure!"

Same thing happened when Big Pete and Ellen's sex tape dropped back in 94. Why do you think we never got a fourth season?

According to the special features on the Season 1 DVD, they pitched it as multi-cam. They wanted to prove that there was still room in that format to do something creative and interesting.

"Slap Bet" is How I Met Your Mother's "The Contest" or "Pier Pressure." It's basically the show's definitive statement, even if there are technically better episodes.

I buy it 100%. For me, Buffy's decline coincided with Angel's premiere, and the absolute worst years of the Simpsons coincided with Futurama's original run.

I go back and forth on whether I prefer Season 4 or 5, but they're both so, so perfect.

"New Girl" and "Girls" were already things by the time "Whitney" debuted, so that assertion would have been doubly pointless.

"Dumb as a box of hammers, but he's such a handsome guy…" I haven't heard that song in years.

Can you make out the autograph to "Lou Dobbs?"

I started following this show mostly because of the great write ups on this site back in the third season. My roommate at the time had the first two seasons on DVD, and I blew threw them in one weekend, then caught up on season 3 through a website that streamed the show with Japanese subtitles. I've been watching

I saw the first one and thought it was fine. I never got the impression that it was taking itself remotely seriously, which made it easy to roll with the punches and enjoy it.

I don't think Willie would get too much hate if Temple of Doom was the first movie. She just suffers so much in comparison to Marion, who is SUCH a stronger character.

Couldn't the same argument be made for the original Enterprise crew, particularly Shatner and Nimoy? By the time "Generations" rolled around it had been the same cast for 30 years, and then those particular characters pretty much disappeared for the next decade and a half. Regardless of your thoughts on those movies,

I always wished Belloq survived the movie and showed up in later sequels. He was just so perfect as the "anti-Indy."

I like T3. I'd be okay if it never existed, but that movie's a lot of fun.

True, but I just have a hard time getting worked up about it. I can enjoy the show as much as I want and no one can stop me, but I'm 28. They're not making it FOR me.

Back when this movie was first announce a few years ago, someone on the production said the Turtles were going to be full body suits with CG faces, like "Where the Wild Things Are." Bummer they didn't stick with that.

Well, minus the wood chipper, Indiana Jones and Austin Powers both had fathers who helped save the day and lived through the series, even though they didn't show up until the third one.

I've only seen a few episodes of the new show, and found it a little distracting, but you have to imagine the target audience for that show are kids who were too young for the 2003 cartoon, let alone the 1987 one most of us here probably watched.

I chuckled at the mask thing, and one of the Turtles yelling "Batter up!" during a fight/action scene seems pretty on point.