@avclub-f9612d06549ffe449e39e34fae8e2549:disqus Agree, definitely.
@avclub-f9612d06549ffe449e39e34fae8e2549:disqus Agree, definitely.
@avclub-500e75a036dc2d7d2fec5da1b71d36cc:disqus I actually laughed out loud.
@avclub-3521a3a5bcfea0fe1189f8bc13af1f99:disqus I am enjoying your username + profile picture combo.
They started performing when they were all 13 years old or something and it's now been 10 years and 4 well-selling albums.
My hormonal teenage sister quit watching. That's how you know it's really terrible.
David Brooks never makes any arguments that aren't dipshit.
@avclub-97d6c074b974838257db17a02f8784c4:disqus Admitting the problem is the first step to recovery…
Yeah, I don't really have a desire to revisit Season 4 (I'd rather just watch "Fancy Party" and "Flu Season" and "Harvest Festival" over and over), but I'm sure it had its moments. I wanted Leslie to win her campaign but I didn't find the details of it all that interesting…
I know I'm replying to this a thousand years too late, but I just saw this episode, and, not having seen Kids In The Hall, it was bugging me the entire time that I couldn't figure out where I knew the therapist from!
preach!
I hate that I cannot go anywhere to talk about comedy or feminism on TV or feminism anywhere without running into some piece about Girls. I dislike it so much more because of all the pointless attention it's getting.
Wow, I don't exactly understand how this works, but it seems like something I might want to try! I hate paying for cable, but there are some shows I'd really miss. (like our favorite Sutton Foster saga —- when will it get renewed already???)
I'm bewildered by it as well. I get that all popular shows have their backlash, but it feels like people are really looking for stuff to criticize. I thought Season 4 was a drag and Season 5 has had its weak spots, but it's still one of my favorite things on television, and I reject vehemently the idea that P&R has…
whoops, I meant to reply to you and not to @avclub-6ca57d2774f04ac8acf3d2b10f0338f4:disqus , see below.
yeah, once you acknowledge that it's a weird, unexpected decision for Ann to want a baby in the first place the show does a pretty good job of exploring the ups and downs of the idea. No way Chris would be hands-off about his sperm growing up.
Hmm, I guess we'll have to agree to disagree. Their marriage is definitely a little one-sided, but I don't think that that emasculates Ben. He's clearly happy with his nerd-self and over the moon about Leslie. They've been so goopy together for so long I think some of the poignancy of his initial attraction to her…
@avclub-743cfa650b0691910c7a6b0d07f177c4:disqus Hmm, well OK. I did really love his conversations with his brothers, especially as Stephen learned to see him as an adult, not a baby, and Will realized how much older mentally he was than James. (It was James, right? My copies are all buried away somewhere.)
oooh, I'm putting that documentary on my list!
As if it weren't bad enough that they actually wanted to watch American Dreamz…
The Annotated Alice is amazing. As a language dork, I especially loved all the translations of the Jabberwocky. Plus Gardner explained why all those weird songs were actually brilliant parodies of treacly Victorian children's literature.