You are correct. And yet it was only the second stupidest/most traumatic death of a semi-regular on that show, after Lorraine Toussaint, who died after eating from a contaminated gift basket of mini-muffins or some such nonsense.
You are correct. And yet it was only the second stupidest/most traumatic death of a semi-regular on that show, after Lorraine Toussaint, who died after eating from a contaminated gift basket of mini-muffins or some such nonsense.
I remember that Snoops too! But I also remember the David E Kelley Snoops, mostly for the behind-the-scenes drama. Rob Thomas (then of Cupid fame, later of Veronica Mars fame) was hired to be the showrunner, which fit nicely since Cupid leading lady, later of showkiller infamy Paula Marshall was one of the titular…
She's been self-involved this season? Like when she hid the fact that she was coping with their children's lice outbreak since she thought Jim was so stressed out about his big meeting, when he was actually playing around with Dr. J and having a great time (and lying to her about it)?
She's been self-involved this season? Like when she hid the fact that she was coping with their children's lice outbreak since she thought Jim was so stressed out about his big meeting, when he was actually playing around with Dr. J and having a great time (and lying to her about it)?
Well said, and you make one of the points that confounded me about the review (but said it much better). The reviewer answers his own question before he asks it. Why did they intervene here? Because they specifically said they were still there because of Jim and Pam. To see the cornerstone relationship that is the…
Well said, and you make one of the points that confounded me about the review (but said it much better). The reviewer answers his own question before he asks it. Why did they intervene here? Because they specifically said they were still there because of Jim and Pam. To see the cornerstone relationship that is the…
Love triangle? Someone who's been a part of her life for nine years shows her some kindness at a very low, very vulnerable moment and suddenly he's a love interest for her? Really not seeing that at all.
Love triangle? Someone who's been a part of her life for nine years shows her some kindness at a very low, very vulnerable moment and suddenly he's a love interest for her? Really not seeing that at all.
Yay to Anne being awesome. Julie White rules all.
"Murder chicken" alone proves you wrong. There was plenty of great stuff in the Season 1 holdovers.
Actually, the production order isn't really the correct order, at least not anymore. The episodes produced for the first season all should have aired in the correct order, and only made sense in that order. However, when they began making the second season episodes, obviously the end of Season 1 hadn't aired, so they…
Ugh, of course he did. Brain fart. I don't know why I thought that.
Heh.
The review never refers to "Monday June" being pulled. It refers to how THIS episode was originally slated as one of the earliest, then puzzles why it was pulled from that intended earlier date. Hence the reviewer considering investigating whether there was some kind of incident in April 2012 to explain why it was…
Hell, evidently they can't even show the Season 2 episodes in order. We've seen the first five, and now the next up on Tuesday is…#8. #7 was the one originally scheduled for Sunday which was bumped for "Mean Girls…" (and hasn't been rescheduled) and who knows when they'll show episode 6.
Technically the remaining episode is Season 1, Episode 9—it's production code 08, but since the numbering started after the pilot ("Daddy's Girl…" is the second episode, but coded 01), it's the ninth episode.
What's especially perplexing is that, for all the talk of how the holdovers must be weak since ABC decided to skip them, now that we've seen them, the first seven episodes produced (as opposed to those aired) would have made a solid first season:
1 - Pilot
2 - Daddy's Girl…
3 - Mean Girls…
4 - Making Rent…
5 - The Wedding…
6…
It's really depressing that the show's writers obviously put some actual care and consideration into developing the characters' growing relationships over the intended first season of the show, only to have ABC shit it all away by throwing the episodes out at random. "Let's take the 3rd episode (2nd post pilot)…
it’s a gimmick episode that, in retrospect, is pretty obviously going gimmick to hide the fact that the actual story isn’t all that compelling.
I knew he was trying to take advantage of the experiments as a way of sending Peter back, but for some reason I thought he'd started them before (because they'd had Peter for 6 months, which doesn't seem like a lot of time to come up with the idea, start pumping kids full of drugs and having them develop paranormal…