I mostly tuned out starting in Season 3, but it wasn’t Mere’s suicide attempt—it was the horrific George and Izzie hookup that happened right after that. Such a huge misstep.
I mostly tuned out starting in Season 3, but it wasn’t Mere’s suicide attempt—it was the horrific George and Izzie hookup that happened right after that. Such a huge misstep.
To be accurate that’s not what the story says. (It actually forced me to go back and read the story so make sure I hadn’t missed anything yesterday, and I hadn’t. I really could have done without experiencing it again, too.) Huang writes that the guy just stood there with his dick hard reading the Bible. There’s no…
Yep. Last month:
Fortunately for you, those questions can be answered by reading Rapp’s interview, where he addresses that. (It also wasn’t a Hollywood party; if anything, it would have been a Broadway party.)
I had to scroll down far too long to find someone saying this.
True. But there’s a difference between saying “former actress Caitlin O’Heaney” and “a former actress named Caitlin O’Heaney.” The latter makes her sound like a complete nobody, which she wasn’t. That was the basis of my comment. Bad enough her career was evidently taken from her; now modern journalists (or blog…
I think it was supposed to show their difficulties acclimating to their new time (to “hilarious” effect!). By the second season they ditched the costumes and were dressing more contemporaneously...and they promptly got canceled, so maybe the show needed the gimmicky costumes after all to remind viewers they were fairy…
Fairy tale magic, of course!
Aw, kind of sad to see her described as “a former actress named Caitlin O’Heaney,” like she’s a nobody anyone would have ever heard of. She was the original—and better—Snow White on “The Charmings”!
Very worth watching.
I still love this.
“That was kinda the whole point of the big rift in the last season during the big trip.”
Yep. That wasn’t just character assassination. That was “shoot the character in the head, burn the corpse, piss on the ashes, bury them, dig them back up and defecate on them” level bullshit.
Probably not a, well, surprise since, according to Sepinwall, the story was pitched by Michael Schur, who of course wrote “Halloween Surprise.”
As long as you said it, yep, I thought this was the weakest of the three. The first episode was uneven, last week’s was great, but this was a big ball of meh. It felt very much like a boring late-season edition of the original show. Jack’s plot was a big nothing, Karen’s was barely interesting, Will was barely in…
As someone who watched a bunch of Gimme a Break episodes on Youtube last year solely due to fondness for the theme song, I couldn’t disagree more. The theme song is wonderful; I kept watching solely to listen to the variations on the theme. The show was terrrrrrrrrrible. Nell was a stone cold bitch (why was Addie her…
Slate posted this link to a tweet that may describe one of the offending tweets:
Oh my god. I don’t know if the episode was really that good or it just felt so great to get back to normal after the depressing prison plot, but I sat there with the biggest, dopiest, happiest grin on my face the whole time. Starting with the opening Holt-Peralta scene (Inscrutable/extremely scrutable, uncle murder,…