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thatsall
avclub-c5a29b1cb50b623be71e28e80dd73007--disqus

I was at this show and this was more than deserved — this wasn't some comedy club gig where you expect a few things shouted out by tipsy patrons, it was an expensive show at City Center and a couple of people near the front seemed to think it was a conversation with them. He'd already tried to shut it down and tell

Maine?

I have to say I got a little irritated by Probst making it a "runs in the blood" thing with Brandon. That just felt a lot like fully admitting this is just what the producers wanted and that they couldn't care less about real mental illness (yeah, I know that's obvious but they're not supposed to come out and admit

Wow. I seriously never once thought she was making an attempt at an American accent. Oops!

I guess I don't get it. My boss has me do new stuff that I hadn't done before all the time without paying me more. Firms expand, jobs evolve. I thought that's what happened at most jobs, they give you other/additional/new responsibilities that become a new part of your job. Especially training a new person in your

Hasn't she always had the accent on this show? I never noticed her trying to pull off an American accent.

They're making her do it for free? I don't understand, they're paying her well and didn't tell her she had to do it while she's off the clock. Or did they and I'm totally confused?

It really didn't make any sense — when the Governor pitched it, Rick immediately demanded to know why he should trust him that Michonne would be enough and that he'd then leave the rest of them alone. The Governor's answer was pretty much, "Because!"
And that was enough to make Rick believe he might be on the level??

Maybe I misunderstood but I thought they'd said he didn't know there was a warrant for him when he returned last year?

I was confused by this statement: "there were some nice moments in the Gunnar and Jason storyline—like the show undercutting the predictable by having Gunnar throw the gun into the creek after having promised Scarlett no one would get hurt by it"

Yeah, I get grief sex, but he'd literally walked in, sat down, and told her about it 15 seconds before. It doesn't happen that fast.

And wouldn't it stand to reason that a local rag in Nashville would most certainly put a story about divorce scandals between their own mayor and one of their biggest celebrities on the front page?

Dylan McKay and Kelly Taylor in the tag at the end were plenty to push this from decent to good. For me. Plenty.

Definitely. I knew him less from his film roles and more from his theater roles, where he plays a much more eclectic range (since from a Broadway house you can't see the crazy eyes, so that doesn't typecast him!), so I was really psyched to see him go outside of the usual niche he has on film.

I want Jean Weir to be my mom so bad. (Baker also plays the lead's mom in Girls. Would it be redundant to say how perfectly maternal she is? She just seems like her hugs would make everything all better.)

It's so good. Finally caught it last weekend, and it's just such a terrific atmospheric piece. And my god she's fantastic.

That's because tofu doesn't taste like anything at all on its own.

How in the world do Marnie and Hannah both still have their jobs, when we've watched them just walk right out of said jobs in the middle of shifts for no good reason?

He was lonely, recently separated from a bad marriage, and had a bunch of no-strings sex with an immediately-available, decent-looking woman who he'll never see again. He didn't pursue her, court her, or marry her, so I guess I just don't understand why it's so hard to buy.

Interesting. One of the biggest criticisms I've heard both from regular viewers and critics is that Dunham's male characters are better-written than the female characters.