Yes! I regretted that I didn't get to that scene in the review as I was busy with the more confrontational elements, but that's a great read of the events.
Yes! I regretted that I didn't get to that scene in the review as I was busy with the more confrontational elements, but that's a great read of the events.
Part of it is also in Pushing Daisies he was playing a character who was very uncomfortable with all social interaction, given he'd deliberately avoided it for years. Aaron has no such mental block and is free to be more confident, crisis of faith aside.
I wish I'd had room for that line. It was delightful.
Easily her best episode since the first two. It feels like they've got the right mix of meddlesome, sarcastic and high-strung going on here.
That pun just made me do a Picard-style facepalm. You win!
He's going to be in the new AMC show Halt and Catch Fire, which I'm very excited about.
… #headdesk
And that little grin on Aaron's face when she says that just seals the moment.
Absolutely. They deserve it.
Unfortunately Ben Schwartz already has a regular gig on his terrible Showtime show. Which is also keeping Kristen Bell from better things.
Sadly she's in New Zealand and hasn't shown any signs of wanting to be full-time in America.
Revolution was so, so terrible by the end. I want to stop writing about it but I don't think I can stop watching it.
The alien response: "Shut the fuck up and let us skitter in peace."
Thankfully Buffy season one had the decency to be hilariously awful. "I Robot… You Jane" is a pinnacle of unintentional comedy.
Yep, that was a mistake on my part. Now corrected.
See my review of "Karma Chameleon" for some thoughts. I'm always impressed by the fact that he goes darker than a lot of writers, and he's got an interest in duality that meshes well with my own. I wouldn't say that I can tell right away what episodes are written by him, but when I go back and look at the writing…
And now the spelling has been corrected on this site.
That's one of the nicest things a commenter has ever said to me. Thank you! I miss The Borgias too, and I'm sure I'll miss it even worse once the spring comes back and I don't have it to watch anymore.
It wasn't just hearing it at the time - I read several articles prior to the season premiere (Entertainment Weekly and TV Guide) that spelled it as Vohm, and none of the promotional materials I received prior to the season launch specified the name. But now doing more research it appears that Volm is in fact correct.
If I recall correctly, his beard wound up stuck to a patient who was covered in glue and they had to shave it off to get him free.