Speaking as a woman and a liberal, if I never hear the term "rape culture" again it'll be too soon. Feminists nowadays seem to think we live in Game of Thrones.
Speaking as a woman and a liberal, if I never hear the term "rape culture" again it'll be too soon. Feminists nowadays seem to think we live in Game of Thrones.
I hate to have to bring this up again, but I can't believe people here, of all places, are outraged about the "racism" and "misogyny" of the infamous tweet. I know throwing around the term "misogynist" is the thing to do these days, but just try for a minute to understand it as a joke. A not particularly well…
My only complaint is that he wasn't asked about his roles as Sam AND Stan Sweet in "Brother, Sweet Brother: The Killing of Stanton Sweet".
This is so great for so many reasons. Eric Roberts is the kind of guy "Random Roles" was created for, and he definitely delivered.
The characters have all slowly (and in some cases, not-so-slowly) morphed into exaggerated versions of the actors playing them. Troy is probably the one who's strayed the farthest from the character that was originally written in the pilot. I've read before that Troy and Abed were never intended to be such good…
I'm sure this has been pointed out further down in the comments, but after re-watching the earlier seasons I have to ask: if Andy is this broken up about having to work alongside Erin now, how does he deal with the fact that he works with his ex-fiance, for whom he showed more affection than he ever showed Erin?
To this day, I honestly do not get peoples' beef with the second one. What exactly was so terrible about it?
Despite it being overly melodramatic, simplistic, and "on the nose" at times, this show is a hell of a lot of fun and I already can't wait for another season.
I miss "The Good Guys". Aside from the obvious network meddling, watching Bradley Whitford and Colin Hanks bust punks every week was fantastic. Hopefully this show will have some of that same ass kicking spirit.
Like many writers, my first love is the food service industry.
I realized that might have come off as jackassy, but it's because I was working there. I'm definitely not the kind of person who gets invited to such things.
That's part of it - also the fact that he's a fellow pop culture nerd who got famous and is now banging hot chicks. But I can assure you, this image we have of him as a douchey bro is wrong, at least as far as I could tell (and working in the high-end dining industry, I have a pretty good sense of these things).
I met Seth Macfarlane at the after party of SNL's season premiere this year and totally expected him to be a dick, but that couldn't have been further from the truth. He was very nice and surprisingly humble, constantly praising the talents of the cast and downplaying his own acting ability. So now whenever I hear the…
The Internet is trying really, really hard to make this guy a thing.
Wow, Melissa McCarthy being loud and dumb and gross, then having a moment that suddenly humanizes her? I can't wait to see her do the exact same thing in that dumb-looking buddy cop movie. She's obviously very talented - if only she showed the same kind of range in her movie roles as she does on her CBS sitcom (I…
Someday we're all going to realize that the characters were all two-dimensional and that by season three the show had disappeared completely up its own ass. But until that horrible day, I'll still love it.
I can't get enough of this Han Solo image they use for Star Wars news. I can almost hear him saying, "Don't fuck this up!"
The sketches were all based on scenes that had come out of long form improv.
He might be referring to the fact that Matt Walsh knew Paul Scheer was fucking little boys in the UCB green room since 1999 but never reported it to the authorities.
Or, like most of my comedian friends, they have rich parents.