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Spencer Hastings
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It was Rutherfurd.

Doctor.

Toby Huss voiced Cotton and Khan, not Dale.

People are probably thrown by the fact that this show did such a good job with a similar character in Season 1 without making him into a two-dimensional Obstacle.

Try Successful Alcoholics

GO CARDINAL

Howard was good in Pygmalion, great in 49th Parallel (which really leaned into the "apparent milquetoast with real spine" side of his persona).

Monica manipulates Ed: "It’s nice to see [Monica] can take [such bold] steps when it comes to her own career."

Which cliche were they milking there — "anti-intellectual redneck" (Texas housewife) or "liberal snowflake" (worried about self-esteem)?

Where Cookie Monster to accuse Joe Scarborough of murdering an intern? The comments section seems incomplete without that.

It was a migraine, not a stroke — but yes, both she and Scott Adsit conveyed disorientation better than Bayer tonight.

Actually that was the one part that felt off to me. Kids on WitWICS got to pick their own destinations if they won, and no PBS show would be so gender-normative and divorce/death-non-conscious as to assume that all kids were taken care of by moms. This was before gay marriage was in the public consciousness, but

As mentioned above, Armisen and Schneider are of mixed part-East Asian descent. Nasim Pedrad is of Asian descent, but not East Asian. Armisen and Pedrad played the premier of China and his translator in a very funny sketch that probably wouldn't fly today.

Eleanor did lots of petty things, but the show's big revelation is that her HUGE crime was destroying an immigrant's life in a fit of pique.

I wondered if he was being set up as a love interest for Gloria (or even a sex interest—we never learn how their encounter in the bar ended!). It's a bit of a stretch, but they had great chemistry, Carrie Coon is married to a much older man in real life, and Gloria is clearly out of step with her generation, so who

One can argue about whether it "makes sense," but I think the reason it feels so "off" is that after all the effort put into developing these characters, having them die because Hanzee just snapped feels uncreative and anticlimactic.

Other way around: Charlie as Peggy; Dee as Hanzee. Charlie is the dreamer and Dee is the sociopath.

I saw it in the US on video; they were not part of the movie.

What was Hugh Grant thinking???