avclub-ffb3df5b8dd7c63202ec9f38de4d8008--disqus
bblase3
avclub-ffb3df5b8dd7c63202ec9f38de4d8008--disqus

Yeah, AV Club, I think this would be getting a lot more clicks if it were listed under the recent TV Club reviews or if it even came up on the Taboo show page when you search the site. The only way I was able to find it was from a link that Emily tweeted.

Seriously, does anyone know of a good site that does weekly reviews of comedies? In one week, I lost LaToya's reviews of Angie Tribeca, Comedy Bang Bang and Another Period. There's gotta somewhere that covers these shows.

I'm not sure that explanation really flies though - if they were so worried about appealing to a wide audience and didn't want to upset the type of viewer that would complain about seeing black people on MTV, then wouldn't they also avoid playing an artist like David Bowie? I can't imagine there were many racist

His verse on "Diamonds (Remix)" is one of his best ever.

A lot of great songs here, but really no "Jesus Walks"? It's one of Kanye's best beats and contains some of his most focused raps.

Yeah, this seems crazy to me as well. Will no one ride for The Knick? No, season 2 has not been as amazing as season 1 was, but it is still the best directed show on television and has consistently great performances.

I think these episodes were filmed a while ago, immediately after they filmed Season 4. So the Hulk Hogan reference probably didn't have quite the same context when it was written as it does now.

Victoria Jackson is on there.

Every time I read "and Gene Creamers as Coach Teacher," I laugh my ass off. It's the double whammy of ridiculous names that gets me.

Boardwalk Empire is really good, and I am honestly never bored while watching it. It always looks amazing, has an incredible cast that always bring their A game, and it's always got about 6 or 7 interesting plots to follow that each affect each other and usually tie together naturally by the end of the season.

This is definitely true of LOST, but it was far from the worst offender regarding this particular trope among long-running shows in the 2000s. I used to watch Smallville, and Lana Lang, Lois Lane and Chloe Sullivan had to have averaged over 100 concussions per person over the course of that series. Granted, Smallville

So was there a scene that I'm forgetting where Olenna was shown handling Sansa's necklace? Or is that assumed to have happened off screen?

So one thing I'm not completely clear on - the poison that killed Joffrey was contained in Sansa's necklace, and Olenna Tyrell somehow delivered this poison. But how and when did she do it? Was that explained? I feel like I am missing some crucial detail, or I'm just dumb.

Maybe it doesn't count as a sketch, but every time he did Nicholas Cage on Weekend Update was hilarious.

Everything about Young Larry Bird was perfect and hilarious, especially his inner monologue.

Yeah, I'm not sure why he kept saying 70 minutes. It was 100 minutes long, which was probably too long.