avclub-e829ef65c088b7eac63bc2e15d941765--disqus
Albert_is
avclub-e829ef65c088b7eac63bc2e15d941765--disqus

She doesn't play banjo. She plays a banjo guitar, so, really, she just plays guitar.

They do want to be older, but they want the 21-year-old sweet spot that seems incredible to them now, but that they'll detest once they're there.

I agree that Jake has been a really uninteresting character this season, but I liked that he picked "stop" as a safe word and that they picked a safe word at all. Both Jake and Tamara are dealing with a sort of discomfort with their sexual inexperience and I think the overly-literal safe word Jake picks emphasizes

I did not think of Fabio when Sadie mentioned Lissa getting hit by a bird on a rollercoaster, but thank you so much for reminding me of that.

Definitely the worst thing about this episode is that my friend's blog post about it led to me reading Cat Marnell's fucking terrible Vice piece about how much she loves angel dust. But I laughed my ass off at Hannah and Elijah on coke and I have never complained about seeing Jon Glaser.

Anybody else notice Alice being a little less icy toward Adam? She actually cared enough about what he said to get back at him and, after the big reveal at the end, when Adam said, "God, I love you," she smiled at him, which I don't think she's ever done sober.

I miss when this show focused more on Josh slowly being introduced to the world of the supernatural and Sally getting frustrated trying to move cups. That was more fun to watch than this. I wasn't paying attention to the time, so when Nora wondered if Stevie and Nick had woken up in their graves, I completely expected

I'm watching this having never watched much of Sex and the City. Twenty minutes in, I haven't felt out of the loop, so I'm glad the show's writers made the show with viewers not familiar with the original series in mind. I will, however, say that the show's soundtrack is bugging the shit out of me. We get it. It's the

I forgot about Cory in the House. My bad.

I ship Cam till death, bro.

Skip is a cartoonish oaf, but he's ultimately the only established character and, thus, the best shot at decent character development in the show's future as we watch him gain tact and his father's approval. Becca is as described above and Emily is defined solely by her desperate yearning to be considered part of the

Just as good as Alex's comment about Dave fixing a cabinet was his response: "I know what I screamed into."

I got excited, too. The moment he came on screen, I started repeatedly say, "RICKETY CRICKET!" to myself and flapping my arms like a fool.

He showed up in tenth anniversary clip reels, but I think they just went separate ways. He does a show on the Cooking Channel. I'd guess he just doesn't have much interest in doing topical stuff anymore.

He showed up in tenth anniversary clip reels, but I think they just went separate ways. He does a show on the Cooking Channel. I'd guess he just doesn't have much interest in doing topical stuff anymore.

Ben naming trees was one of my favorite parts of this episode. I also like Ben mentioning his dad when he was naming trees in the tag. It calls back to the competitiveness his father ingrained in him that was mentioned in "The Fox Hunt." Even a gag at the end of the episode is tied into something essential to his

Ben naming trees was one of my favorite parts of this episode. I also like Ben mentioning his dad when he was naming trees in the tag. It calls back to the competitiveness his father ingrained in him that was mentioned in "The Fox Hunt." Even a gag at the end of the episode is tied into something essential to his

I really wish the collaborative writing style of network sitcoms would find its way to cable sitcoms more often. It seems to me like anything not written by a small group of writer/creators on cable is complete schlock and I would really like to see what a team like New Girl's could do if ratings were less of a worry

I really wish the collaborative writing style of network sitcoms would find its way to cable sitcoms more often. It seems to me like anything not written by a small group of writer/creators on cable is complete schlock and I would really like to see what a team like New Girl's could do if ratings were less of a worry

Did "I Just Want My Pants Back" get one? And that show was actually kinda, sorta good, at least compared to this. This has better odds because it doesn't have to compete, futilely, with the Daily Show and Conan for it's target demographic.