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Brown Joey
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His weight yo-yos quite a bit lately, pretty sure he's not in one of his hefty phases atm though.

How can this entire list exist (some of which are very good, but almost all of which skew pretty damn current) without anybody mentioning the best use ever which is the rental car counter scene in Planes, Trains and Automobiles?  Did the entire AVClub staff grow up so late that they've only seen the edited version

I've always loved 14 Songs, and still consider it his consistently best solo album.  I've bought them all as they come out though, and some get more play than others.  14 Songs is the only non-Replacements album that gets consistent play from me though.

Harold?

Liked for no other reason than flying that obscure humor flag.

Everybody should prefer Ruxin.  My first experiences with Kroll were The League and when he was one of the foosball Germans on Community.  Because of those two things I was under the impression that Kroll was hilarious and The Kroll Show was kind of a rude awakening that his comic sensibilities maybe weren't as good

You thought they had the right idea, until you first heard the Badpiper and realized HE had the right idea.

I used to not get emotional over things like this, I used to be cold and hard inside.  Then I had kids and turned into a giant baby.

Much less badass, me getting teary eyed at work reading this.

My college job was as a cashier at Sam's Club (then called Pace) in northern Arizona.  Lots of rich people had vacation homes in Sedona and would make the drive in to Flagstaff to buy food at Pace.  This is when Sean Young was still making tons of big movies.  She wrote a check (remember those?) for her food and

Wait, Sterling Archer posts here?

Isn't it time that somebody pointed out that for how incredibly smart Ferris was portrayed, the entire idea of reversing the odometer by placing the car in reverse is a shockingly stupid idea inconsistent with the character?

His Alan Alda on Running Wilde was so good I literally immediately went to look it up and make sure Alda hadn't done a voice over for the episode.

Just shut up and give me my participation ribbon already.

I haven't watched it since I saw it as a kid, and my mind did a good job of trying to forget about the movie for me.  What my mind can't shake is how absolutely horrible I felt while watching it and afterwards.  Even now if I see the cover for the thing I'm overwhelmed with a sense of darkness, while all I truly

I barely touch Twitter but can guarantee he's not the funniest thing on it by a long shot. 

In between seasons I do a good job of not thinking about shows or characters/actors on those shows.  It took all of 2 seconds before my Donna crush was back in full force.

Loved them in high school (when they were still around).  Still dig their stuff out on occasion.  Also, they were probably the nicest band my friends and I ever saw.  They'd always hang out after a show seeming to dread getting in their van to drive to the next gig, but they'd be super friendly and typically remember

The problems were ample.  The show went down the rabbit hole about 8 too many times with the most notable being when they brought Peter back into an alternate reality that technically had all of the characters we knew, but they were all different enough that we weren't invested in any of them.  It was wheel spinning