He shows up in Heaven with his real hand and, I think, the implication that he's "giving golf lessons" to the California Girls-esque angels. Sadly, there's no mention of getting a stew going.
He shows up in Heaven with his real hand and, I think, the implication that he's "giving golf lessons" to the California Girls-esque angels. Sadly, there's no mention of getting a stew going.
Nile Penguins and an Egyptian tomb in the Himalayas. That museum bit was genius.
And let's not forget this is the network known to insist on that formula to an almost absurd degree.
Yeah, the robosexual joke is the one that's always made the least internal sense. One thing no one has mentioned yet: it was the excuse that Fry and Bender used for hiding from Leela in the Pilot, and it was perfectly fine there.
Anyone remember Lucky?
@Wide-Eyed Youth: that's not a euphemism of some kind, is it?
I like your antennae.
@ Cyrus & Enkidum:
It's also on youtube: http://www.youtube.com/watc…
First it was one way, then the other.
The first result from Google for that phrase:
Bigger than Dragonfly? It's got… Kevin Costner.
@Yankee: That description fits every movie Jared Hess has made. I'm surprised to hear people complain about this one like it's unique.
@Fuck
Now that it's come up again, I'm pretty sure Jack's growing cut on his neck is some kind of foreshadowing to his throat getting slit.
"A puppy committed suicide after seeing our bathroom!"
The storm let up in the background of the scene the moment Death gave up his ring, and right before he mentions the "instruction manual."
To be fair, the show has always cribbed from Gaiman. Pre-Apocalypse, the show was essentially American Gods: the series.
"Douchey Bono" is redundant.
@Rememblack: Considering that scene takes place before the real Christian is even born, and without Locke ever meeting him in person, how could Smokey have a "source" for Christian? Smokey either draws from the memory of people he meets or uses the dead around him.