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Jay S.
avclub-eac75edc18b8546c46893fe4b75ab995--disqus

They should have done a 13-episode final season of L&O instead of rushing LOLA onto the air, which quality-wise was simply was not ready to launch that fall.

Yes, you have the right to vote for whoever you want, even someone who has zero chance to get elected.

At the presidential level, there are two parties who can win. You vote for your preference between the two, even if you dislike both. You leave your purity at the door, hold your nose if necessary and make a decision. Otherwise, it's wasted.

You can include anyone who voted third party, or eligible non-disenfranchised voters who didn't vote at all.

For a Fox show? That's unpossible!

What's the world coming to when you can't trust a poker player?

Leave It to Beaver is easily the most underestimated sitcom of all time.

"As we hope our own delving into the ’90s this week has helped show, sitcoms of that era were doing some next-level shit."

Because without reliable brand names on the shelves, no one knows what anything is, so they wander around in a daze. Also, the aisles are narrow and crowded.

But that's what makes him so relatable to his supporters. He's the kind of "tough guy" of which they can put themselves in his shoes, one who never actually earned it.

It's not that they're offended, he just gives the game away too much.

And the only thing that bothers some traditional Republicans about Trump is the way he expresses himself, while his core beliefs are pure GOP.

There's a decent chance a lot of people watched it, even if they were disappointed in it, so it might come back. Not sure how much lousy quality plays a factor in these Netflix cancellation decisions.

Nor have I. But we're at the point that not only can't you watch everything, you can't even know they all exist.

If it does worse than The Great Indoors, they'll pull the plug without a second thought. They know this is a gamble made out of desperation, now that Mondays are a disaster and TBBT is running out of time.

Because it's a terrible, terrible idea that doesn't fit with the CBS comedy brand.

Why should McCain have all the fun?

In other words, CBS comedy is in big, big trouble.

It's probably up to Mariska. When she's had enough or wants too much money, that'll be it.

What kind of average would SVU need to get cancelled in a world where fractional shows routinely get picked up and the benchmark gets lowered every year? It seems that no matter how low SVU sinks, everyone else sinks too so it never gets in trouble.