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miles_underground
avclub-fcd4c889d516a54d5371f00e3fdd70dc--disqus

Yeah, I just came in here to mention the rabbit scene. Carry on.

@Pancake: Since the Archmage of the Aether isn't around to make with the Dungeons and Dragons references, I'll pick up the slack with something my old high school GM said in reference to Tiamat, the five-headed queen of chromatic dragons:

The ability of two people to take such totally different views of the same information would be the great strength of the human race if it didn't so often lead one of them to kill the other with whatever is handy.

For me, it seems like they could just take Jesse out for a beer, explain that the people that burned Michael burned him— using Michael— and after they clear up this global conspiracy, they can get back to making Management wear his ass for a hat. (Apologies to Burt Reynolds, but I've been saying that since I

I don't care for Kind, but I thought he did well here. He normally plays a whiner character (like his hypochondriac from Scrubs, or the mayor from the S2 finale of Leverage), but here he was more of schlub who was still a stand-up guy.

I thought this was a pretty good episode, but there was no moment where I clapped my hands and giggled like a schoolgirl, which is the barometer by which I judge BN eps.

Aside from the unfortunate pun, Donovan's slow burn is one of the most consistently amusing things on this show.

If that were true, skirt, why did she end up marrying Hugh Grant after going to all those funerals with him?

Sex, Lies, and Videotape…
Andie Macdowell and James Spader. I don't see that couple making it.

I'm pretty sure they break up when he joins the army and get back together at their 10 year high school reunion after he becomes a successful assassin and she has her face widened.

When's it too early to start bitching about Reynolds being the Green Lantern. I don't really care that much, but I don't want to start bitching too early.

The line in the sewer/catacomb about the Ark ("Are you sure?" "Pretty sure." Or something.) is perhaps a little funnier if you consider the events of Holy Grail take place not long after those of Raiders.

I mentioned this a few recaps ago (sometime during S1, I think), but The West Wing was one of the funniest shows on tv.

Until Parks and Rec came on the air, The West Wing was about the only show on television that had a positive attitude towards government. Compare Toby's line, "Despite its failings in the past— or in the days to come, for that matter— government is a place where people come together. It is an instrument of good,"

Sho'Nuff is the baddest mofo in Harlem.

OK, I'll point this out…
The shoes Fiona gets from the client are the same shoes Piper Perabo was wearing in the shoot-out in the "Covert Affairs" pilot.

I liked the Eureka premier and tonight's ep had some interesting thing with rebooting the setting of the show. It looks like they're going to go that route for a little while, so this season may be an interesting example of how a show can rewrite most of the characters, their relationships and the setting itself

I would vote for "The Mentalist" as long as they cover "Psych" with it as well.

Worf was always my favorite character. That is all.

Art of War does tend to be a lot of common sense type stuff, as is The Military Maxims of Napoleon and most of the other strategic texts you can find. The technology changes but the basic business of war is pretty much the same shit it's always been. Sun Tsu could have written, "Attack your enemy's strength with