avclub-c20b8cf7e3996c8ded8bc426c7882845--disqus
Alan LaCerra
avclub-c20b8cf7e3996c8ded8bc426c7882845--disqus

Louise is the reason we have a dance-off.  Thank you, Louise.  You're the best!  :-)

I'll have to look into that.

I have no idea why, but I laughed out loud multiple times during this episode and I don't usually do that even when I think something's funny. :-)

This episode ended with me liking Sheldon for rebuffing Amy's Snow White plea and disliking Leonard for being such a perv.  (We already knew that Howard was a perv, but I'm more okay with his Cinderella attraction since his wife knew about it and may have wanted to be Cinderella for Howard as much as for any other

Great episode.  :-)  And we got a George and Tessa scene.

In the event that Elizabeth and Philip are not moles, the KGB should keep their children safe.  Otherwise, besides being furious at receiving physical and psychological beatdowns for no good reason, the couple may blame the KGB for any harm that happens to befall the children in their absence.

The Americans makes me think of Alias for obvious reasons, but tonight what with the creepiness of the kids' driver, I was thinking of Joyce Carol Oates's "Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?"  I'm not really sure why.  Maybe it has to do with James Cruise's article "'Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?'

So, it's not wrong to kill bad guys in Disney movies, but it is wrong to kill bad guys in this TV show based on Disney movies?

I share the Romantic poets' love of Prometheus and thought that Supernatural did a fair job with the character.  It was weird to see a titan, someone who should be literally and figuratively larger than life, as just some basically normal, albeit cursed, guy.  (Shouldn't he have had some sort of power beyond the

What is up with all of the Bell, Book, and Candle recently?  First it's mentioned in a review of Supernatural, then it comes on TCM, and now it's in Bunheads.  Before that, I hadn't even heard of it.  Weird.

Lucifer did a pretty bad job in "Hammer of the Gods" if all of these other  deities are left.

I was laughing nonstop during this episode.  Thank you, Archer, for filling my life with such joy.  :-)

So the condom's grand narrative purpose is that Michelle can go have sex with Godot?  I'm not sure how I feel about this.

This episode didn't feel like a bottle episode.  The dance place is so big, and stuff was going on upstairs and outside as well as in the building.

The gentlemanly thing to do is to take the place further back in line by her, right?

When you're going to get upset over a bad hair day, stop and remember what Jenny says in "Sabrina Through the Looking Glass": "That's right, I forgot, hair grows."

And she wasn't playing herself.  Somehow I think the episode could have been better if she were.

And CONSTABLE JENNIE GARTH!  :-)

Bell, Book, and Candle was on TCM today.  Were the writers of this episode watching that, or what?!

Here's hoping.