avclub-c0f8dbb69a6e71545459f9b88e475c47--disqus
Arthur Chu
avclub-c0f8dbb69a6e71545459f9b88e475c47--disqus

Well, it's a jokey episode overall, but nonetheless we have the evidence of the episode with the dude with the letterman's jacket that makes him totally irresistible to women, and we see Willow fall head-over-heels in love with him just like all the other female characters, and as a result she decides she has NO OTHER

Well, it's a jokey episode overall, but nonetheless we have the evidence of the episode with the dude with the letterman's jacket that makes him totally irresistible to women, and we see Willow fall head-over-heels in love with him just like all the other female characters, and as a result she decides she has NO OTHER

@LurkyMcLurkerson:disqus Willow deciding that she was 100% lesbian after hooking up with Tara always weirded me out. If it were a conscious choice that she made to identify that way for some emotional/personal/political reason I'd consider it somewhat cruel and jerkish — "All my past relationships and past attractions

@LurkyMcLurkerson:disqus Willow deciding that she was 100% lesbian after hooking up with Tara always weirded me out. If it were a conscious choice that she made to identify that way for some emotional/personal/political reason I'd consider it somewhat cruel and jerkish — "All my past relationships and past attractions

Joss putting the song "Nobody's Asian in the Movies" on the Dr. Horrible commentary soundtrack is pretty much one long abject apology for this.

Joss putting the song "Nobody's Asian in the Movies" on the Dr. Horrible commentary soundtrack is pretty much one long abject apology for this.

@avclub-d019eb089e65903455cc52308f00b997:disqus That's explicitly stated, as I think I've said on these threads before, in Shindig. Mal tells Inara that what he hates about her job is "the lie of it", the fact that Atherton Wing walks around in public acting like he's actually Inara's lover/partner/husband when he's

@avclub-d019eb089e65903455cc52308f00b997:disqus That's explicitly stated, as I think I've said on these threads before, in Shindig. Mal tells Inara that what he hates about her job is "the lie of it", the fact that Atherton Wing walks around in public acting like he's actually Inara's lover/partner/husband when he's

You're also all assuming that that was the real Topher, and not a magical simulacrum created by the Elder Gods after they rose up and destroyed the Earth.

You're also all assuming that that was the real Topher, and not a magical simulacrum created by the Elder Gods after they rose up and destroyed the Earth.

That's the thing about shows like this, people frequently talk as though the environments in them were only sort-of-dangerous, like living in the city as opposed to the suburbs, instead of looking at how literally crazy dangerous they are — these are armed criminals that are constantly on the run from the law. We just

That's the thing about shows like this, people frequently talk as though the environments in them were only sort-of-dangerous, like living in the city as opposed to the suburbs, instead of looking at how literally crazy dangerous they are — these are armed criminals that are constantly on the run from the law. We just

I didn't like this character when she was played by Alexis Bledel in Sin City either.

I didn't like this character when she was played by Alexis Bledel in Sin City either.

I loved the episode Three Stories on House enough that I'll submit that one for this title, though that's as much Season 1 House vs. its rapid decline as it is that one episode — but even then that episode (and other episodes done by David Shore himself) stand pretty far above their immediate neighbors.

I loved the episode Three Stories on House enough that I'll submit that one for this title, though that's as much Season 1 House vs. its rapid decline as it is that one episode — but even then that episode (and other episodes done by David Shore himself) stand pretty far above their immediate neighbors.

I've always thought the point of the show wasn't that it was any flaw in any of Ted's previous flings that keep them from being The Mother, but that it's a flaw in Ted himself. Ted finally Meets The Mother when he grows enough as a person that he's the kind of guy who could actually be in a long-term, stable

I've always thought the point of the show wasn't that it was any flaw in any of Ted's previous flings that keep them from being The Mother, but that it's a flaw in Ted himself. Ted finally Meets The Mother when he grows enough as a person that he's the kind of guy who could actually be in a long-term, stable

You know you're in trouble when you suddenly realize you're the Ted and your current SO is the Robin.

You know you're in trouble when you suddenly realize you're the Ted and your current SO is the Robin.