Not sure if this is the best place to post the link, but Jamie Weinman, the expert on the show who Noel referenced in his Very Special Episode segment on it, posted all the episodes on his blog. They seem to still be available.
Not sure if this is the best place to post the link, but Jamie Weinman, the expert on the show who Noel referenced in his Very Special Episode segment on it, posted all the episodes on his blog. They seem to still be available.
Sorry to play factchecker, mostly because it means I know too much about this show, but this was the second time the restaurant wasn't seen at all. The first was the first Octavia Spencer episode. That one also ended with Christy having sex with Baxter, so I spent most of the plot wondering why it was such a big deal…
Actually, the character's name is Daniel Douglas (which may not be any more accurate as a Southern name.)
I think he's referring to Josh Groban's guest stint on the show a couple weeks ago as the guy with a crush on Sydney who wrote a song about her.
Heh—I came here wanting to say that Sean Saves the World deserves coverage instead of this terrible show. SSTW is growing on me too, and I really enjoyed tonight's episode. Not to mention, the idea of Sean and Craig Ferguson was surprisingly hot (and the "The sex didn't hurt…Well, briefly…" joke amused me.) I know…
Ugh. I really hate that the show ditched Josie like that, and so quickly. I hope there's more in store for the character, because otherwise the whole arc seems like a waste of time, nothing but a tease for a great story that never developed. (Though her big speech two episodes ago probably would be enough to justify…
This show always makes me so happy, but few moments have ever given me as much giddy joy as the calzone party sequence. Sheer bliss.
Back in Season 3, when Leonard and Penny fought and Sheldon’s reaction was to run away, it was funny. Now that it’s my reaction to them, it’s significantly less amusing. Please stop, show. Stop with the fighting. Stop making Penny stupid. Just…stop.
Looking forward to the reviews, but I'm most grateful to you for bringing "The Night of the Doctor" to my attention. I'm so out of the loop I'm probably the last person to hear of it and had no idea it had been released. Totally made my day. Thanks!
I'll take your suggestion just as soon as you study up on contractions.
Hating the way they were portrayed in this particular episode does not mean I always hate them in every episode. Sheldon is not always this horrendous. Leonard's misery is not always played up to such a horrifying degree. Penny is not always this terrible at her job. Raj is not always this utterly embarrassing. Howard…
Because it's one of my favorite shows currently on the air, even if it's far less consistent than it once was. At least 3 of this season's episodes were A-level for me, and most of the others were around B+/B. Which is what makes an episode this bad so dispiriting.
I loved the last two episodes, but this one was godawful, the show at its worst.
And yet, James is actually supposedly a big name respected journalist in this universe? Olivia said they needed to get Josie a sitdown with "someone big, someone experienced. A Diane Sawyer, a James Novak." Which made me laugh out loud. Seriously? At the end of last season he was getting his big break by getting the…
No, it was pretty clear Fitz didn't know her mother was on the plane. He wouldn't have looked so devastated when she revealed it, or had so much trouble coming up with the next "I don't know what you're talking about" without prompting. He would have had no reaction at all.
Yes. Josie all the way.
I'm assuming Dan Bucatinsky had something to do with it, since he and Kudrow are partners in their own production company.
Rock on, Josie Marcus. That speech was everything.
And just because it deserves to be shared, "End of the Curse":
Yep, this was the best episode yet, and I'm fully on board with this show. The menopause stuff was all fairly hackneyed—the whole "she thinks she's pregnant, but it's actually menopause" stuff gave me flashbacks to "The Golden Girls," which unsurprisingly dealt with the material with more heart and insight than this…