avclub-e351d553ab36bba1e39fc72bf75d9fda--disqus
Cheerio
avclub-e351d553ab36bba1e39fc72bf75d9fda--disqus

I thought I read that first shot of her character in Pretty Woman, where they pan up her clothed-but-not-very body stretched out in bed, uses a body double.  More toned stomach or somesuch.

That's exactly when Constable Reggie said.

Oh my god.

What the hell has he been drinking?

I'm pretty sure it's more like:

Because he can't properly enjoy greasy, junky food unless he's alone in his apartment, has at least 12 more slices, and has the option of fondling himself while he eats, if only he could muster the energy to move his hand.

"one of the better parts of Stargate: Atlantis"

I won't have time to watch the episode till this evening, and I certainly haven't gotten a chance to read all the comments.  But I figured at least some of the people here would be interested in this:

'Britta had a kind of special role in being able to see through Jeff,
sort of being the "cool person" in the group who didn't have hysterical
meltdowns or manic bursts.'

Couldn't Tania and Sue be estranged twins?  Sue's always been a bit awkward, so Tania didn't want to include her in her cooking classes, and Sue turned angrily to something Tania, a good Pawneean, hates—salads—and made it her life's work.

I'm sorry, we were looking for "I didn't just fall off the turnip truck.

It wasn't so much that the test questions themselves were racially biased.  It's that back when the firefighting companies were racially segregated, white men got lots of experience with the test.

So, I just watched this on Netflix because of you guys.  I agree it was definitely emotionally upsetting.

So, can people explain to me exactly what's offensive about The Beef?  I believe that he is; I just haven't seen him in anything except Freaks & Geeks, where he was adorable.  And I don't really plan to watch any of his more recent movies.

@avclub-a8cf86b7e95be74b1204e22a9aab9cd0:disqus Yeah, exactly.  The cliffhanging yet wallowing pulpiness of the way Breaking Bad examines morality reminds me a lot of Dostoevsky.  I like them both very much.

Colbert was visibly delighted that Belafonte razzed him a bit, and seemed joyfully incredulous he got away with prompting him into a duet.

Woulda made sense, yeah.

You could look it up!

H-A-Ah, H-A-Ah, H-A-Ah with a V
V-A-Ah, V-A-Ah, V-A-Ah with a D

It's an entirely different kind of flying.