avclub-c5f8bd526737c3b40cf9ecea838d37e1--disqus
rc114
avclub-c5f8bd526737c3b40cf9ecea838d37e1--disqus

yeah, sorry: I just signed up and started commenting literally on sunday. Forgive me for overlooking a minor detail. Ease up, bro. The insular nature of commenting sections is a bit foreign to me.

I just groovesharked it and I think the Menomena song was played during a different bowling montage than I remember. The song I'm thinking of had a classic rock sound to it….I think there were two bowling scenes. I saw it on the original showing (I'm on Pacific time), so I saw the episode like 4 hours ago…my memory is

Thanks!

damn, keep f-ing this up: *Kenny holds the knuckle ball up to his mirror

*Kenny holds the knuckle ball is help up to his mirror

what's the name of the song played during the bowling tournament montage and the song played over the ending credits? anyone know?

I think the knuckle ball grip might also be symbolic. It's a mirror that obviously reflects back to Kenny. In a sense, his family re-emerging, Toby, April Leaving, etc. has thrown his life for a knuckle ball. Unpredicable, hard to read; those are the primary characteristics of that pitch. As such, what could be a more

The Wire was based more on Greek tragedy than on the familiar Shakespearean dramatic trope. I can't say it any better than Wire creator David Simon: Another reason the show may feel different than a lot of television: our model is not quite so Shakespearean as other high-end HBO fare. The Sopranos andDeadwood—two

I hate to be one of those annoying, over-zealous fans of a certain show, but I think The Wire is deeper, smarter, and flat out better than The Sopranos. The Wire is angrier and more ambitious, plus politically and socially relevant. Check it out.

I've always thought the roommate from the Switch was pretty damn hot. It's funny that you mentioned that. Props.

I'm sorry but these Sims reviews are unnecessary, boring, and annoying. If people are reading these reviews and then commenting on them, shouldn't he go ahead and assume that they've seen these episodes already? In other words, mere plot summaries and pointing out flaws in an episode that he could never write are