Her line readings at the beginning of the episode were straight outta "Mixology."
Her line readings at the beginning of the episode were straight outta "Mixology."
Yeah, there was not really any context for why he was in a dress, which was kind of weird. You could stretch it and say that he was trying to imitate (person whose name I can't remember but Elizabeth Banks played her in the movie), but there was really no indication of that.
Before you pass judgment, watch The Butterfly Effect Effect and The Kerkovich Way. If you don't like those, you can probably give up.
While I too don't want to pass judgment just yet, you are wrong about The Office. The pilot is rough, but Diversity Day, Health Care and The Alliance are all great, and the other two episodes (Basketball and Hot Girl) are OK.
While I disagree with you (I love Digital Estate Planning), it's worth noting that Harmon agrees with you, vocally criticizing that episode on the Season 3 DVD. The man is a narcissist, but he is very self-critical, something few people give him credit for.
Whedon pitched a Wonder Woman script years back, and Warners said no.
There are many, many episodes of Community worse than The Art of Discourse, but I'm afraid to name any at risk of being looked down on.
I wouldn't say I'm on "the backlash bus," but it definitely hasn't consistently hit its high notes since Season 3.
Why would you ork a cow?
But Clash is the Tyrion book!
RANK THE BOOKS!
@avclub-e56ced79d1049a08025835434a572e01:disqus I'm not saying that The Hunger Games link is a bad one (though I agree, the promos have been pretty odd), I'm just saying that if you are going to do it, at least use your best available name pun.
"Swingers or Crashers?" "Fred Claus."
It just makes me so Chang-gry!
This has probably been pointed out before, but can we all agree that the competition that takes place in the first episode would be much funnier if it was called "The Hunger Changs"?
@avclub-7fd1d5cec910c61b1864a51eb7e18cbc:disqus Having that many minor romantic pairings is commonplace, a key part of most modern sitcoms. Your list has a comparable number of pairings on The Office, HIMYM, New Girl, and many more.
I suppose I think of "will they/won't they" relationships as relationships that actually cause you to ask the question "will they or won't they?"
They'll let it go when the show lets it go, so… yeah, never.
They'll let it go when the show lets it go, so… yeah, never.
No, this is a bad list. Having people in a relationship with a guest star or one-off character is not the same as a will they/won't they. No one has ever wondered if Ron is going to end up with Tammy 2. Out of the 18 mentions you have, I'd say between 5 and 8 of those (charitably) could be called will they/won't they.