You don't really have to credit your brother with a great catch like that. Steal the glory!
You don't really have to credit your brother with a great catch like that. Steal the glory!
I thought Gilligan was paying homage to the only TV sequence more analyzed than Breaking Bad, the opening of Mad Men.
PLAYUH really expected them to start kicking ass and taking names. God, that man is really gonna need Mike and a guy like Saul Goodman.
This business requires restraint. That is the opposite of restraint.
Gosh, that poor fellow's bar tab must have been huge, with all of those $50 tequilas. Good thing he's a money printing machine.
Yeah, yeah, I've watched Aladdin with the girls one too many times.
His new firm has a collection of art from which to choose. But Slippin' Jimmy is fine with the Don Draper piece. But he does want the Cocobolo desk he imagined in the "Bingo" episode last season.
Ed Begley Jr. as an old man is thrilling me. The highpoint of his late career had been A Mighty Wind (with McKean), and I fell back in love last year with the absurdly ignored Blunt Talk. Excited to see what they do with him here.
That's Viktor with a "K," and Jazelle Giselle. Technically, they're Boers.
In my excitement for the episode, the return to Cinnabon seemed likely to be a boring drag. But they brilliantly set the hero in a place of no escape, with his only choices to expose himself with the "Emergency Exit," or to wait. He waited, and soon enough extricated himself just fine. This is foreshadowing as Dickens…
Henry is constitutionally indisposed to the likes of Roger Moore.
More like the industrial farm bucket loader backs into the turbojet inlet.
It is too easy to imagine Stan falling for the banana in the tailpipe.
Pastor Tim's transformation into Brian Setzer pleases me. I am really looking forward to a Belinda Carlyle look for Paige when she goes underground.
бивень!
They cleverly kept Henry out of the trailer's spotlight. Is there any doubt that it is he that will save the day?
The headline made me hope Gordon Ramsey would be joining forces with a supernatural being to wreak havoc on the lives of chefs.
After Amazon's recent entry in the genre, I don't know whether I'll be able to embrace early 60s alternate history without some real-life Nazis running the show in NYC.
In the preview they showed during The Walking Dead, Jimmy was going by the name "Mr. Cumston" while lounging in the pool. I am dying to learn what that is all about.
Blonde Lady™ chose to procreate with creepy father, and proceeded to raise rotten children. Nothing sensible or sympathetic there; she earned her fate.