Exactly. Also, statistically people are more likely to vote for politicians with children, so I think ironically these babies will "humanize," her to the Pawnee constituents who really seem to hate her.
Exactly. Also, statistically people are more likely to vote for politicians with children, so I think ironically these babies will "humanize," her to the Pawnee constituents who really seem to hate her.
I feel like this argument is more about how we need more main female characters to not have their entire plot-lines driven by romance/"having it all"…which makes sense to me. They do it in Britain all the time. On Absolutely Fabulous the characters deal with their fading youth and on the IT Crowd Jen gets to finally…
"It's okay. I'm on secret millionaire!"
Obviously he needs to apologize to women for being a complete dick and portraying them as incapable unless they're in a relationship, but he also should apologize for fucking up an entire premise of a show. There was a whole article in the LA Times about how pissed people were about how they portrayed sketch comedy on…
I do not count that as an apology….I also do not count his 30 Rock cameo as an apology to the comedy community for inaccuarately portraying the behind-the-scenes of sketch shows and comedy writing. He's pretty much going to be parodied/satirized for the rest of his career because of Studio 60 and The Newsroom.
What I hated the most was the fact that Mathew Perry's character wrote the entire 120 minute show every week pretty much by himself and insisted that all the writers wear suits all the time.
Still waiting for his apology for Studio 60.
I don't think it has as much to do with the relationships working with one another as it does with the fact that these guys are more a family than the characters on The Office were and because whenever The Office is discussed, Jim/Pam is always a focal point. Harmon was trying to say that Jeff/Britta or Jeff/Annie or…
I think they were in character because they were going to return to the "natural world," the "normal world," the, "non-Greendale world," where they're safe to do as they please and forget that Greendale exists. So they could act that way—the way of how a normal couple would act.
At first I agreed with this, but Shirley was the one to say that Jeff needed to look into his heart because, "something," was in there.
The Antz line was great…I mean, in the 70's you'd never think Woody Allen would end up voicing a cartoon ant.
Okay true that. I just reallized I read it wrong—however, him possibly thinking that Annie has become a cynic still plays into his emotional response to her.
You're the AT&T of people (I feel like I have to post this even if you're being ironic).
Edit: fixed the previous comment.
Britta's the dark cloud that unites them.
I now want an episode where the entire thing is just Dan Harmon, Dino, and Rob Schraab using puppets in Harmon's basement—doing all the voices for the characters themselves.
They're technically not "broken up." As Todd said, Britta called off the "wedding," not the engagement. Jeff called off the "marriage," not casual sex.
Like the others have said before, they wouldn't ever get legit married.
Some Troy heart/off-handed jokes about computer sex was needed.
Annie: Stop! You guys, what are we doing?