bjau75--disqus
BillBrasky
bjau75--disqus

That's what I really enjoy about this show. The way it doles out little bits and pieces of information at a time really make you want to see the next episode when an episode finishes. It is really more like a movie that progresses 30 minutes each week than a TV show. The only other sitcom I can think of that's like

Her movie career could definitely be going better. Her last movie "Barely Lethal" I think didn't get any theatrical release at all (in the US) and went straight to DVD. This movie at least got released in about 50 theaters. She has a comedy-drama called "The Edge of Seventeen" coming out later this year that doesn't

Hailee's song "Love Myself" could be interpreted a myriad of ways, but the most obvious way seems to be the dirty one.

I'm pretty sure Jones's ex-relationship in real life with Sudeikis is why they would steer away from them being a couple on the show. Also, they just introduced him as a character, so they are taking time to establish his relationship with his brother first before they start integrating him into the dynamic of the

This person's comment is akin to walking up to someone at an art gallery who's enjoying a painting and yelling at them "What are you doing? This is terrible!"

I love being told how wrong I am about something as completely subjective as whether something was funny or not.

I feel like last week with Russell Crowe there were a lot of sketches where the premises were just bad. Like that Henry VIII one, I can understand people not laughing at that because it was one joke repeated over and over and not that funny to begin with. But with this show it seemed more like a "We don't know what to

Why are so many people here blaming the writing in the show for being bad because the audience was silent through a lot of the sketches? That's the fault of the dumb audience, not the writers. Even Jost got kind of fed up with the lack of response after a while and blurted out "But do you get it though?" after one

Dad, I got good news and bad news, the good news is my mother the car's still alive, the bad news is PantsGoblin had sex with her

Where does Kristen Schaal fall in your spectrum of "attractive" to "smoking hot"? :)

It seemed like there were a lot of alternate versions of things in the movie than what was in the trailer. Like the scene of Michelle expressing disbelief at Bell's character having a child ("Was that through intercourse?") The whole back and forth between her and Cedric Yarbrough ("You've always given off kind of an

Verified by the director himself on the audio commentary for the DVD (don't know why I remember this, but oh well)

"My non-monocled eye!"

You can actually sort of tell that the sketch with Chloe Moretz is the only thing in the movie that was written and directed by women, because it's the only sketch that actually has intelligently written female characters in it (Chloe's character is sympathetic). The joke is entirely on the father and her clueless

Full disclosure: I LIKE THIS MOVIE AND I DON'T CARE WHO KNOWS IT.

Some other casting announcements have been made about this: Thomas Lennon is playing Michael O'Donoghue, and John Gemberling from "Broad City" will be playing John Belushi. For a comedy nerd like myself, this is a more exciting project than a million "Justice League" sequels could ever be.

I guess they're going to have to hire someone to play Michael O'Donoghue too. Possibly Tony Hendra, Brian McConnachie, and P.J. O'Rourke also? I don't know how deep into National Lampoon minutiae they're going to get with this.

Are they really going to try to have a sexual relationship between Mike and Melissa though? Olivia Wilde's a very understanding lady if she allows them to do that.

Oh, OK, I got the impression that the "purge" thing was just a thing that was happening in this exclusively white neighborhood that Epps and his family move into. Like an urban version of Shirley Jackson's "The Lottery" or something.
But you're saying that the purge supposedly has been going on in the US for a while

I would rank the episodes in this order: 1) Lapkus 2) Downs 3) Robinson 4) Rothwell 5) Zebrowski 6) Brown 7) Early 8) Berlant.. I thought Lapkus's episode did the best job of tying all the sketches together in an interesting way, and it was also the one that made me want to see more of all the characters. She could