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Skull Kid
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My Popcorn Now

Patton absolutely losing his shit is the best part.

Basically one of the greatest things I've ever heard. It felt like a Death Ray episode in the best way possible.

"I gotta interrupt here: Who cares?"

"“If you cut Cecil The Lion’s head off, great. But you’ve gotta eat it. You’ve gotta eat everything. Even the dick.”—Hayes Davenport,Hollywood Handbook"
You can't really appreciate this quote without hearing Hayes saying 'dick' in the EXACT way that every jock in my highschool said it.
These guys have such a pulse on

Two parts of her are fat, certainly.

I found that Breaking Bad really is not the show you remember until midway through Season 3. Up until then it's a very methodically paced dark comedy of sorts, with some very dark dramatic moments thrown in. The last half of the show is really the opposite (an incredibly dark drama with moments of levity thrown in). I

I've rewatched evey episode of Mad Men so many times, but yes…Breaking Bad is not so fun to revisit more than twice. It's a nearly perfect show, but shows like Mad Men and Lost (tied with Mad Men as my favorite show of all time, I'd say) are just so…expansive. They're about so many things. They're about EVERYTHING.

When I saw the headline I thought, why the hell would I buy this when I can just watch the thing for free on Netflix?
Then I saw the packaging.
And a certain penis I know started thinking differently.

"This is a show about eternal conflicts and personal change, and I think all this time-travel stuff has been fun and useful from a narrative and thematic point of view, but I’m betting that when this season ends, it’ll hardly be a factor anymore. I’m thinking next season will be about that struggle through the ages

Talkin' Tang

Val Kilmer's face: filmed in IMAX

This is the episode that absolutely sealed to me, as a first time viewer, that there was something beyond sci-fi happening. I was expecting, up until this point, a cynical sci-fi "twist" to the show in the end. That they were all part of a social/scientific experiment, or something. But when Michael crashes his car

Very late to the party here, but this is a super under-appreciated episode. I remember thinking the final "twist" was a little cheap, but clever. Upon rewatch, it's more than that. It's profound. As you mention, Daniel Lee, the karma speech gives that flashback perspective. It was actually a very season 1-like episode

I really liked this episode. Michael went out on a really sour note in Season 2, so I was glad they gave him a proper send-off (and one of the series' best episodes, I think) in Season 4. The fact that Michael couldn't kill himself sort of reminded me later on that Ben stops Locke from killing himself, only to kill

In the chance that someone ever sees this comment: (Spoilers for those who have seen the whole series)

Not exactly in the Indiana Jones spirit, though, is it?

This argument kind of bugs me. He's an action star. He kills bad guys.

I bought Rare Replay. Soooo good. That opening song brought an enormous smile to my face. That's the Rare I know and love.
The best part is it allowed me to transfer my save data from the 360 ports. I could pick up Banjo Kazooie right where I left off (thank god, since I've gotten 100% on every level except Click

Nothing's straight A's.