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youre wei-ei-ei-eirding me out
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That was the moment that made me start blubbing, too! Their relationship is just so important to me, I think I was denying the show was finishing until that happened. Then, of course, Ron told Vaughn not to get emotional and I laughed and managed to pull myself together for a bit. I feel like the writers knew that

Presumably because everything in Star Wars took place "a long time ago in a galaxy far, far away". Fan wikis in general tend to favour using the past tense to maintain a consistent point of view.

I know! I remember being so bummed when the first trailer came out and all I saw was negativity everywhere because I was still holding out hope based on Paul King's involvement, not to mention the cast. But still, regardless of the marketing campaign, I'm not that surprised it did well in the UK because they had the

It's his pet project, he's also developing and writing on it. Apparently he's a big fan of the 1968 film version, and he's been trying to get his take on the air since Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip was cancelled, but CBS passed on it back then. In the interim he created Mr. Sunshine, then later starred in Go On, and

I went to the cinema to see a couple of movies by myself, which I haven't done in a while. Into the Woods and Paddington, both of which were barely showing anywhere any more so it was a trek and a half finding screenings, but I'm glad I sought them out. Woods was fun, mostly for the over-the-top performances, but not

He wrote, directed, and executive produced every episode, it's safe to say he was basically the showrunner in everything but name.

The fact Leslie roped Madeleine Albright into being her D.C.-based Ann Perkins stand-in was amazing. There were more than a couple of times I thought Leslie was about to blurt out a "beautiful tropical fish" during that scene. It's crazy how far Leslie has come from the pilot, going from having a photo of Albright

I've watched and rewatched that part so many times since I first saw it and it never fails to make me laugh. Her complete and utter bewilderment is amazing. What I'm trying to say is that I can't wait for you to die so I can crash your funeral.

After posting that link they followed Netflix, Amazon, and Yahoo Screen on Twitter, so whoever's running the account is pretty hilarious, whatever the countdown ends up being for. I mean, there's like zero chance it's leading to anything but announcing the show's coming to streaming, right? ("#ketchup"/catch up) But

To be fair, Chris Pratt has been using his heightened fame off the back of Guardians of the Galaxy to promote a bunch of charities, like the Fear Isn't Real campaign to help a kid with brain cancer, and both of them have done appearances like this in the past, so it is part of a trend rather than a one-off photo-op.

The synopsis for her pilot sounded interesting until it mentioned she was playing the model's former assistant, rather than the model herself. I got pretty excited by the idea of Rachel Dratch being a super model who's been in rehab for ten years. I thought she may not have been relegated to the wacky/put-upon

At the end of last season we saw Pawnee merge with the Eagleton and more than double in size in the process, Gryzzl select Pawnee as a city to take part in their free wi-fi initiative (which clearly meant the people using it became their guinea pigs in return), and Leslie convince the National Parks boss to relocate

He and Taika Waititi were at the screening I went to and they did a twenty minute or so introduction about the New Zealand government commissioning them to make such an "important documentary", which was arguably even funnier than the actual film, although both were brilliant.

He's talked about his point of view before, this isn't really new news, although him saying, "I have trouble with the idea of a female Doctor, only because I reckon if you’re born on Gallifrey a man, you’re probably a male Time Lord," is kind of gross, and ignores what's been established in the series.

For what it's worth, his name is spelt Steven, actually.

Yeah, Australian films don't necessarily do great business in cinemas in Australia, and they don't have the financial backing to compete with international films in marketing or number of screen, so it's pretty rare for them to get wide releases. It's always kind of surprising when they do well overseas. According to

The financial success of Star Trek, The Amazing Spider-Man, Man of Steel, and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles would imply otherwise. All of their core fan bases are nerds who complained about the need for a reboot prior to release, but at the end of the day they still handed over their money so they could be the first to

I cackled, snorted, and even shed a few tears through the rest of Selfie this weekend. I enjoyed the first four episodes when they aired, and was all ready to stupidly commit to another new low-rated sitcom even after being burned by both Enlisted and Trophy Wife last year, but before I knew it it was already

From the 8th to 15th century Vikings colonised parts of Scotland, which is what partially inspired the original book series the movies are based on. Presumably the main reason none of the lead teenage characters are Scottish is because DreamWorks wanted well known actors for the parts, but it also acts as a way of

Other than one reference in season one, the show's never kept up the pretence of actually being documentary footage. It's much more in the vein of Modern Family where it borrows the style and structure of a documentary, including liberal use of talking heads, but making sure the camera-work would actually be