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Starshine
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As Durst said, only the killer could have written the note to police. If he did write it, that places him in LA, since it was dropped in the mail there. The note and the earlier envelope are far stronger evidence than his confession, IMO (and far more likely to be admissible). That doesn't mean his multi-million

You don't need to prove motive to convict someone of murder. The whole trial is going to come down to whether the envelope is admissible in court and, if it is, whose handwriting expert the jury believes.

In chronological order:
There's Nothing Wrong With Love - poppy, light, fun
Perfect From Now On - epic
Keep It Like a Secret - combination of the other two

I'm not quite sure what this comment is saying, but I like it!

Are you suggesting there's needs to be some rational explanation for why a thing happens on Twin Peaks - one of the most out-there soap operas to ever make it on network TV? If you're not watching the show with the spirit of "it's a TV show, go with it," you're doing it wrong.

So, I've always wondered about Kill Gil. Throughout the episode the Gromble (or whatever it's called), is Homer's enemy. Then in the final scene they're friends. Do they ever explain how they became friends, or do they leave it completely uncommented upon? I always like that it seemed to happen out of nowhere.

What is that, a lawnmower?

Old Jewish Guy is definitely not the same guy as Crazy Old Man either.

I started thinking around season 13-14 (when their mediocrity had been pretty well established and set in stone) that The Simpsons should age all the characters so that Bart and Lisa are in high school. It would have opened up new plotlines that could otherwise only be explored through cheesy flash-forward episodes

Just because you say you're not using it to justify or excuse him doesn't change the fact that you clearly are.

Thanks, boughten.

If someone made these into stickers, I'd put them on my rockabilly guitar.

It blows my mind that his lawyer, and now his wife, have used the argument "Pfft, people have been saying stuff like this about him for years." As if that exonerates him instead of making him look even worse, and making his wife look like she's in denial.

Ever since I saw American Movie, I always think of the word "coven" as "coe-ven." Luckily it's never come up in conversation, so I haven't had to act out the whole scene from the movie trying to defend that boner.

They probably don't realize that Bumblebee Man is a joke.

I guess I should be the one to chime in to say the song at the end is "Good Morning Starshine," not "Good Morning Sunshine."

A hearty 227 to all!

I don't see how a golden era Simpsons reference could be considered anything but Pop Culture 101 around here.

I'm officially old… and I'm ok with it.

This is my favorite AVClub comment ever.