At first watch, this seemed like the weakest of the whole season so far, but when re-watching some of it, the episode grew on me.
At first watch, this seemed like the weakest of the whole season so far, but when re-watching some of it, the episode grew on me.
Yeah…although I posted that comment earlier, I do indeed agree that the first two seasons are way better than it is now. It seems like the writers are running out of ideas. It's just that I still don't really think this was C- bad.
:O This is the lowest grade any MF episode has ever gotten on this website. I don't think it deserves a grade this low.
"Suddenly, Last Summer:" B+
"First Days:" B-
"Walter Blanco" lol
Definitely. The finale was one of the all-time best episodes IMHO.
Obviously, the ending will be remembered the most, but I think that the second most-remembered moment of this will probably be Walt's confession to Skyler.
I think the second episode was a little weak, despite some really good one-liners (including Penny's reply to Sheldon's fact about thunderstorms).
If you're talking about "Chirp," that episode was actually in season two.
Season four's really good IMO. "Money" and "Night Out" were two other great episodes.
Yeah…If Adams considers S2 to be the best season, yet gives grades like this to it, I'm a little worried about season three.
1. The Office, season 3
2. Parks and Recreation, season 3
3. Seinfeld, season 4
4. Arrested Development, season 2
5. Curb Your Enthusiasm, season 3
They're pretty close, but I think 'Arrested Development' wins because it was less expected.
"Dwight's Speech" has the best piece of verbal humor (the speech) of the entire season, and is a classic moment for the show.
"Take Your Daughter to Work Day" has one of the visual gags (the shocked puppet) of the entire season.
Because it just has to be in the most cartoonish font possible.
There's actually a really clever use of product placement (if it's intentionally product placement) that goes along with the plot. It's in "Performance Review," where Dwight thinks it's Friday.
I read somewhere that was improvised.
"Are you serious?…he was here? When? When I was talking to the fake Tina Fey? Come on…!"
I can understand the low grade for the former, but "Valentine's Day" deserves at least a B+ in my opinion. Michael's "Faces of Scranton" video (and everyone's reactions to it) is one of the cringiest cringe-humor scenes of the entire season.
Ever try watching "Casino Night" or "Dinner Party?"