Pete looks like he should be giving the press a statement about the Apollo 13 mission.
Pete looks like he should be giving the press a statement about the Apollo 13 mission.
I was a student of private catholic schools almost my whole kidhood, and I've always looked at portrayals of Jesus for some sort of humanizing of him. After many years of people wanting to show him so extremely "respectfully" and seriously, many protrayals come off just as you say here. Bland. Though I think most…
I assumed it because it just felt like Jersey shore kind of town. They were obviously not in the South and it didn't seem like New England.
Bob may actually be the most tolerant "sitcom dad" character out there. How many of those types of characters would be anything but creeped out or horrified at the talk of kinky old people sex? He just finds it funny. And yes, while he started helping his father in law for his own reasons, he also seemed like he…
Nice! Did the show buy that in advance of possible purchase, or is that just an enterprising fan good at animation?
I like how the way Todd (Rod?) says that, it doesn't sound like a silly religious thought. He means it genuinely. That's a line that they could easily throw out as a joke.
I dunno, but I'd assume there are far more bands called Hail Antz.
I really wanted to respond to that comment, too. Homer wasn't saying, "If everyone in the world was a Christian…" He was suggesting everyone would be a nice, tolerant, loving person, or whatever good qualities Ned has. It doesn't leave out Jews or any other religion.
I was never under the impression that Americans ever loved the movie Clue.
That puke was some of the most disgusting animated vomit I've seen. Sorry if this disgusts you to point this out, but it was like, I dunno, gooey or something. I'm used to a show like Family Guy where puking is like someone turned on a fire hose shooting out gravy.
I used to watch this show once in a while and found it funny. Now I've been making my way through the entire series on Netflix, and have become amazed at how much of the show seems to be focused on perverse sexual acts. They're all a bunch of freaks. Note that I am not complaining.
Despite his ambiguous employer, Dr. Von Nostrand still deserves our respect. The man is a Julliard trained dermatologist.
Yeah, I was gonna bring up that one! Dale is an overlooked but awesome character!
Ya know, though Andy has become mostly unbearable, I have to say the one scene where I was almost on his side was when Erin and Pete were standing in his office and, in a condescending tone, telling him it's okay, and he should just get over it and move on.
He was in the pool!
That may be true, though it at least is a bit more excusable if in the version of Batman you're looking at he isn't friendly with Bruce.
The simplest way to praise this show is that while it's sort of a writer's fantasy to be able to do this kind of story, it also seems very realistically what may have happened if Barbara was killed like that. Sure, Gordon's a reasonable person, but who knows how badly he'd react to such a thing.
I never interpreted Gordon's reaction to Barbara's almost-revelation to mean he knew it all along. In fact, that conversation was nice, but it also annoys me a bit that it's sort of a cheap way to get out of it. Granted, I wouldn't expect the dream sequence to have really happened on the show, but I could see Gordon…
Part of it may just be that they allow for their kids' weirdness more than most parents would. They rarely correct their strange opinions or tell them they shouldn't say certain things. I think that just encourages them.
The woman pitching it said it was based on stories from her great grandmother (or great great or whatever) who worked there or something. And the credits list her as "Eliza Lemon".