The truth is, Molloy does what he does because he's brilliant. He might be the most brilliant man in Springfield.
The truth is, Molloy does what he does because he's brilliant. He might be the most brilliant man in Springfield.
#ManifestDestiny
#ManifestDestiny
Also for some reason I find the way he says "the likes of which ye have never seen!" hysterical.
Yeah, that whole sequence in Burns' office is perfect. I love the way Smithers gently smiles at him as he continues to laugh about the crippled Irishman.
This episode… so many things:
Season 7. Just watch Season 7. It's the last season where Lex Luthor is a regular character, and it beautifully portrays his descent into madness.
Yes! The fourth episode ("Walkabout," written by David Fury who also wrote for "Buffy" and the fourth season of "Fringe") tells you everything you need to know about "LOST." It remains one of my favorite things I've ever seen on TV.
If you're going to skip most of Season 1, I recommend at least beginning with episode 17 ("Bad Dreams") and going from there. You'll miss some hilarious hijinks involving Jared Harris, but it's not essential.
"Fringe" is probably my favorite show on television ever. It reaches its peak between 2.15 and 3.10, but the fourth season is my overall favorite. It becomes an entirely different show, like an alternate vision of itself, that is somehow equally as good as the original.
I copied down some of the lists that have been posted in the comments on this site and have been slowly working my way through the twenty or twenty-five best episodes. "Jose Chung's" was the first, and still the best. But I also loved "Post-modern Prometheus," and the one with a guy named Nees who is executed, but…
This was a strangely beautiful article.
"I am cutting off Phyllis's head WITH A CHAINSAW!!!"
Watch Season 3. Then watch the last episode of Season 4.
How about "The Prisoner"? Seeing the title suddenly flash on the screen as he looked out the window, every single episode, only to find himself back on "The Prisoner"? And a new Number 2 every week. Pure magic, I tell you.
$pringfield is one of the top five greatest "Simpsons" episodes, if only because it shows Burns' (and the town's) swift descent into insanity.
Homer's "Barney in a bikini" fantasy is probably the highlight of this episode.
I love the bizarre contrivances that the writers come up with on the way to the main plot.
"If You're Feeling Sinister," by Belle & Sebastian
"A Rush of Blood to the Head," by Coldplay
"Sam's Town," by the Killers
"Hopes & Fears," by Keane
"Odessey & Oracle," by the Zombies
"All that You Can't Leave Behind," by U2
"The Boy with the Arab Strap," by Belle & Sebastian
"The Life Pursuit," by Belle & Sebastian
Apparently the writer of "Little Miss Sunshine" has been chosen to direct.