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But MVP goes to three, Bomer, Parsons (perfect) and the actor that played the part of GHMC board guy that was threatened with his job with the city….in fact that guy was absolutely fantastic.

Yep. And I love this headline on a Deadline article from this morning: "ABC’s Paul Lee Defends ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ Move To 8 PM, Cultural Diversity Of New Series, ‘Trophy Wife’ Cancelation"

They don't look that similar to me, other than the fact that they're all about non-white characters. One is a multi-cam sitcom, one is a single-cam set in the present-day, and one is a single-cam set in the '90s. No one was saying "Modern Family," "Suburgatory," "The Middle," "The Goldbergs," "Last Man Standing" and

I like Sleepy Hollow, but I'm very glad to see shows where non-white characters are allowed to be the leads (and entire casts), instead of supporting characters in a white guy's story. Yeah, SH's diversity is nice to see, but would it be possible if the main character wasn't white? Somehow I doubt it.

This episode was absolutely perfect…and makes it so that I never want to watch the show again (and very well may not). Because this is a far better series finale than I ever thought I'd get from the show, and I don't want to watch them ruin it to keep things going. Emily whacking Victoria in the face with a shovel?

PS: Something else I love: that Mindy (the writer) managed to get Chris Messina's pants off so we got a completely gratuitous look at his ass in his underwear. Always appreciated.

I love this show. I have no idea where they'll go from here or whether this will be another show that goes downhill once it puts the leads together, but right now, I'm not even close to caring.

While I'm glad they finally did the Mycroft reveal and didn't have him really be a moron (which would have been severely disappointing), I was loving Sherlock's bitchiness toward him in this one.

Richie can, but I was unimpressed with Ramon. I'm with Gwen—Richie can do better (a point I'm sure Danny would have made if he wasn't distracted with Mindy).

Considering the title of next week's episode and the blurb FOX released, I suspect you're safe. (Not posting them in case anyone doesn't want to be spoiled, but for anyone else, they're available here: http://thefutoncritic.com/l… )

Was anyone else distracted by that shapely male ass in tighty whities in the opening moments of the locker room scene…and then disturbed to realize it was Morgan?

Not sure anyone will see this, but the extended version is on Hulu now. It's 10 minutes longer. More Tammy and Jamm as promised, but I think my favorite moment is Ben's reaction when Larry's the only one who says yes to moving to Chicago—Ben discovering that he liked Jerry was one of my favorite parts of the last

I'm sorry—Mindy thinks Rick Santorum is hotter than Tim Daly?

Sepinwall's review has a comment from the director, claiming that the scene supposedly starts as nonconsensual and then becomes consensual by the end.

For what it's worth, in the world of the show it was a contest between two characters of similar political leanings, since Fitz and Sally are both Republicans (and the Democratic candidate, Reston, was a non-factor, having been exposed as a murderer a few episodes back). Which isn't to say the show isn't ridiculous

For all its flaws, it's nice to see the show is capable of getting great guest stars. Naturally, I'm referring to Ben Lawson as Lohan's groom, whose pretty, pretty self is always welcome on my screen. (Yeah, I know—you thought I was talking about the episode's other big guest star, Flo from the Progressive ads.)

I have nothing to say about the movie, which was disappointing, but thankfully in a way that was just forgettable so it didn't affect my memories of the show.

Except Fitz's DNA wasn't tested against Jerry's. The DNA sample that Eli provided Leo was from the guy Eli shot (Abby took the hair off the corpse and put it in an envelope and gave it to Eli, who gave it to Leo, who gave it to the lab tech), and then Abby bribed the lab tech to say it was a match. Which seemed like

I assumed Olivia figured out that it wasn't consensual based on Mellie's reaction. The pain in the speech and all the lines leading up to how she didn't want to be nailed to Big Jerry anymore seemed to make it clear she wasn't just talking about the uncertainty of Jerry's paternity. I thought Olivia knew, and Mellie

Mellie's "I want to see him burn" speech almost made me applaud. So. Fucking. Good. In every over-the-top bit of it. It wasn't even a matter of agreeing with the sentiment—it was just so real and human in a way the rest of the show isn't, especially since it got bogged down in the bombs and terrorists.