What is this "Terriers" they speak of? From what strange lands does this mythical show emerge from the forgotten mists of time to grace our screens? Perchance they learned of it from ancient etchings on tablets?
What is this "Terriers" they speak of? From what strange lands does this mythical show emerge from the forgotten mists of time to grace our screens? Perchance they learned of it from ancient etchings on tablets?
Misread the headline as Wishbone.
From what I can tell, she essentially played a satirical version of herself on 30 Rock and doesn't really have a ton of talent to bring to other roles.
He's one of Darabont's regulars, as is Laurie Holden.
MERB CERDY
Literally had no memory of this character until you mentioned her.
Exactly, the whole thing feels like a placeholder show, with the details still waiting to be filled in.
Honestly? I know it's an adapted work, but I couldn't remember enough names of non-comic characters from Darabont's era on the show to make the joke otherwise.
Darabont: "Does the kid *have* to be Asian?"
Network Executive: "Ooh, fresh idea Frank, we like it. Robert?"
Kirkman: "No, I have a very specific vision of the ways in which this show will be shitty"
I think Neal McDonough got Shatnered during his time on Justified, and as he's doomed to the same ratio of getting hammier and hammier the more he fills out as he ages.
No Job City
Tentative Character Names:
Really though, fictionalizing the gaps in a historical story isn't anywhere close to novel. And you're right about it coming too late - it can't serve as anything but setup for a second season at that point, so pretending that it was ever seriously intended as a limited series is pretty laughable.
I watched through this recently, and it was competent enough, but the entire thing felt like the show made it from pitch to screen without anyone ever having any ideas. I mean, there's literally no reason for this show to exist - it doesn't even attempt to approach the familiarity of the material from a different…
Gross Eyes is Conor Oberst's side-project for his low self-esteem days.
Matt Lauer? I thought the idea was to *reduce* human suffering.
"Wake me up after my scenes are done"
Inertia.
Season 6 starts well, and "The Doctor's Wife" is one of the best episodes they've ever done, but immediately after that it becomes tremendously uneven, and features an excess of River Song just as she's passed the point of no return in becoming insufferable.
Yep. One more awful season to go.