I actually wrote an article a few days ago about the moral ambiguity on this show (and others), if anyone's interested: http://pupcultural.tumblr.c…
I actually wrote an article a few days ago about the moral ambiguity on this show (and others), if anyone's interested: http://pupcultural.tumblr.c…
I agree that if the traditional television model is lost forever, that would be kind of sad. Part of what I love about Game of Thrones, for instance, is gathering with my sister and my friends to watch it together, and exchanging incredulous looks as the credits roll. That said, it's still possible to do that with a…
It's Always Sunny did it too, though in a very different way.
I thought it was strange that Ruxin's paranoia about Sofia leaving him culminated in him essentially setting his wife up on a date with a guy who shares all the same interests. I was half-expecting the second episode to involve a plot where Sofia leaves Ruxin to be with Lane.
I thought it was strange that Ruxin's paranoia about Sofia leaving him culminated in him essentially setting his wife up on a date with a guy who shares all the same interests. I was half-expecting the second episode to involve a plot where Sofia leaves Ruxin to be with Lane.
This episode was uneven in a lot of ways, but probably the most irritating for me was just how bad the "special effects" were. It was painful watching the actors try to use a piece of glass like it's a phone, and the fact that it's SEE-THROUGH made it painfully obvious that this was not, in fact, technology.
This episode was uneven in a lot of ways, but probably the most irritating for me was just how bad the "special effects" were. It was painful watching the actors try to use a piece of glass like it's a phone, and the fact that it's SEE-THROUGH made it painfully obvious that this was not, in fact, technology.