avclub-f162662683041d544f36d161925ce4a4--disqus
youre wei-ei-ei-eirding me out
avclub-f162662683041d544f36d161925ce4a4--disqus

No, you're right, once he's taken off his jacket he looks down and notices his holster and throws it down the stairwell (for want of a better word?), Lillian took the actual gun earlier.

Fey and Carlock have development deals with Universal Television, but those were three distinct projects they developed for them with separate writers, scripts and casts. Some articles mention they spitballed a bunch of ideas for shows specifically for Ellie Kemper to star in at NBC's request before settling on Unbreak

Start spreading a rumour that all the appearances of "tooken" are actually people garbling "Tolkien", an obvious foreshadowing of Kimmy Schmidt's upcoming regeneration into Stephen Colbert and/or Orlando Bloom in season two? If you can't beat 'em, confuse 'em.

It's not a big deal, I just distinctly remember being slightly worried about how Tina Fey was going to juggle three sitcoms when they were all announced, which is the only reason it stuck in my head. I went and dug through the Tina Fey tag on Deadline just to make sure I wasn't remembering wrong, and all three shows

I could tell something was off about how it was shot and how he was speaking, but I can understand why people might not pick up on it straight away if they were hoping for some genuine development of that relationship, and I definitely didn't automatically assume "he butt-dialled her and he can't hear her side of the

Kemper was never involved with that show, and Fey & Carlock were only ever exec-producers on it, not writing it. Post-30 Rock the two of them were developing three different projects for Universal Television: a "gay Cheers" written by Colleen McGuinness, Cabot College written by Matt Hubbard, and what would eventually

The working title for the show was Tooken when it was given a series order, so she's definitely saying "tooken". It's a recurring character trait.

Yeah, he was a writer on the show during its fifth season which is why he started showing up as a homeless guy, although he kept coming back well after he'd left as a writer. He co-wrote the fifth season finale.

Ah, finally, a live-action version of a film we all remember for its strong plot and memorable characters, and not at all for its animation.

I was going to say, it seems unusually cruel to post an article with the headline "Sigourney Weaver “can’t think of a better director” for the next Alien movie" just one minute before posting a negative review entitled "Chappie suggests that District 9 director Neill Blomkamp could use a hard reset".

Didn't they announce this already last year, or is this a different TV show about Alec Baldwin playing the New York Mayor? This is ringing a lot of bells.

Believing in what you're saying and not lying aren't the same thing at all. And you don't have to admire anyone. I just don't get the specific kind of animosity Kanye garners every time he opens his mouth, even if he's not saying anything even remotely controversial.

I wouldn't necessarily even say he's an ass. He comes across as an incredibly earnest person, and when he speaks you can tell he believes every word he's saying, I just think he can be tactless sometimes with when and how he expresses his opinions, and he's ended up with his foot in his mouth more than a few times as

There’s a Bible saying, ‘No weapon formed against me shall prosper’. Recently I've been doing interviews and I've had to go back to this verse because I don’t think there’s a living celebrity with more weapons formed against them, but I also don’t think there’s one more prosperous. So what weapons have prospered? The

It's a shame, I liked it. I wasn't aware of them before watching the show so I had no expectations going in, but it was a fun little thing to stumble across, and the cast was always solid. The episode with Ari Graynor in particular was great.

I imagine in the case of the Harry Potter cast it helped that they weren't going through it alone, they were around a bunch of people the same age as them doing the same thing as them, whereas a lot of American (and Canadian, in Bieber's case) child stars have come up in more isolated situations where they were the

Oh, you're probably right! I can barely remember a thing about Terminus no matter how hard I try, although maybe that's a good thing.That's the one about the plague ship, isn't it? I'm surprised no one succumbs, although that's also the one where Nyssa leaves, so maybe they thought it a little over the top to actually

It's was a running gag on Parks and Recreation for six years. One of the main character's "evil" ex-wife is a librarian who everyone hates, plus the lead protagonist is an overzealous parks and recreation employee who believes everyone should be outside as much as possible instead of inside reading (despite the fact

Yeah, I'm drawing a blank on any other fatality-free classic stories, too. The high death toll wasn't necessarily reflected on that much during the classic run (although there are some exceptions, like Tegan's departure, the fifth Doctor's, "There should have been another way," in Warriors of the Deep, etc.), but

Ripley, believe it or not.