avclub-e8c6f8b02183223ddcc4fead7aeff49c--disqus
Bearstronaut
avclub-e8c6f8b02183223ddcc4fead7aeff49c--disqus

Seriously. It seems that people like our conspiracy theorist friend up there forget that Oswald was a Marine. Killing people efficiently at long distances is pretty much their job description.

Don't forget her riveting performance in Mars Attacks!

I could of sworn that they did that story in one of the first couple of seasons.

김 대령? 그 얘기는 잘 알아요. 좋은 선택이죠.

Oh that's a good one. A little dark, what with the murders and all but I think it could be pretty funny.

God I love this show. So AV Clubbers, if you could go on Drunk History what story would you tell? I think I would want to talk about the saga of General William Dean during the Korean War. After his division was ordered to make a last stand at the Battle of Taejon, General Dean fought as a regular soldier and

Popes of Chilitown gave me a pretty good laugh. Same with Texas Chainstore Manager.

"Dalek" is a classic though. One episode that should absolutely not be skipped.

I love Doctor Who, but you are totally right about that. It's like Doctor, do you actually know what we are capable of?

My grandpa is a pretty solid conservative and also one of the biggest stoners I know.

That's pretty much what my great-grandfather said to me the last time I saw him before he passed. He was a WW2 vet, a career Navy man, and always incredibly independent but he couldn't even wipe his own ass when he died.

Haha! I used to do that "greetings from the future" bit when I lived in Korea and would call my family back in the States.

Isn't that how most of you jarheads enlist?

I disagree. I admire what Moore was trying to do with his story, but it would have been a lot better if he had mapped it all out beforehand like Vince Gilligan did with Breaking Bad. It would have cut out a lot of the extraneous bullshit and made for a more streamlined story.

I agree. The religion of the colonies was an interesting bit of world building early on, but became tedious as it took center stage in the storytelling. Same with the religious motivations of the Cylons.

Beer-drinker here. Canadian beer sucks.

I'll always love the Sopranos, but mainly because I grew up in that area of north Jersey and watching it is like going home to me.

BSG is the prime example of the faults of creating a central mythology in a show without mapping out the endgame beforehand. The latter half of season three and most of season four (minus the mutiny) just felt like Moore was throwing shit on the wall and seeing what stuck.

For me it's Battlestar Galactica. I loved the show during its first run, but knowing how they whiffed on most of season 4 makes me not really interested in revisiting it.

Man, I really hope you are joking.