No, "Sawyee" is the object noun—the guy who is being sawyed. "Sawyer" is the subject noun, the guy who does the sawyeing. Close, but no cigar.
No, "Sawyee" is the object noun—the guy who is being sawyed. "Sawyer" is the subject noun, the guy who does the sawyeing. Close, but no cigar.
I'm really, really disappointed that neither the show nor the review ever used the phrase "Bride of Franklinstein."
I think Snoop want a word with you.
Out of curiosity, are there two henchmen in the DC comicsverse named Hammer & Nail? Because I feel like that's what they were going for with Darhk's henchfolk.
And I think they did a very, very good job of conveying it. Pandering, sure. Condescending, I can see that being argued. Effective, I believe so, highly. By turning these celebrity showings into five-minute sidebars to explain the situations I think they did a pretty good job on explaining what happened.
The new “Cyber Crimes” unit headed by Peter. Let’s all congratulate Peter. Great work, Peter!
A Scully and Hitchcock-centric episode and Hitchcock doesn't take his shirt off.
Well, it's still alive, but sure.
The "It's a Perfect Relationship" scene always kills me, and does a great job of illustrating both the differences and relationship between Michelle and the kids.
A perfectly in-character handwave.
I'm happy they wrote Emery's "playboy" philosophy into a plotline and made it into something that's sweet rather than selfish. He hangs with all the girls because he has that much love and care to give, and he gets it from his parents. I mean, that's pretty much been established from the start (when Eddie asks Emery…
So between the discussion of detonating Los Angeles and the use of "Pistol Packin' Mama," does anyone else think the writers' room was playing Fallout 4 at the time?
On the one hand, that scene of Scully and Hitchcock eating their microwave burritos during the fight was hilarious.
Too soon, man. Too soon.
The guy who befriended Jane during the writing class to write the exposé. He showed up this ep in another broadcast revealing Rose and Elena's relation.
Except Wesley. Nobody cares about Wesley.
He rejected her, and in the end they never did get together, even though apparently they were intended to if they were picked up for a back nine.
In retrospect, that thrown basketball before the reveal should have given it away.
Selfie, kinda? I mean, she did return his coat.
The question is, is it the same prostitute? Do we know that the ad agency is only in New York?