“Ted only supported him because he was a better coach”. Except Ted supports everyone. He supported him the moment he met him.
“Ted only supported him because he was a better coach”. Except Ted supports everyone. He supported him the moment he met him.
How about Roy whispering in his ear and the show’s wisdom in not letting us know what he said? Jamie’s look said it all.
If you had something better to do you’d be doing it.
“Loved the house being a magnet for the memories of the dead, a great metaphor for how powerful the past can be to us all.”
It’s almost like Stephen King read A Turn of the Screw at some point before he wrote The Shining.
Compared to “Desk Set” these last two will be revelations.
Ladies and gentlemen, I give you... the bias blind spot in action.
How do you name six actors in “Dog Day Afternoon” and not mention Durning?
Just curious: which of you are parents?
It’s “attorneys general”.
Excellent article, but I think your regard for Marshall Crenshaw is a little misplaced. Pop yes, but power? Not so much.
I have a cousin who thought reindeer were mythical.
My (mild) problem with this episode was that Trevor was so prevalent that the “team” was kept too isolated from each other. The show is at it’s best when Eleanor, Chidi, Tahani and Jason are interacting. They were doing far too much reacting in this ep.
“two comedic concepts that just a few years ago were hailed as exciting and fresh... R-rated action comedies—are now commonplace. ”
Guess you never saw “48 Hours (1982)”.
I don’t think the two paragraphs of political diatribe leading off this review added very much. If anything.
There must have been a different feed on my TV. The one on my TV had Legend walking around looking lost until it was time to sing, then doing a pretty mediocre job with the emotional range in the songs. I wish i’d seen the version this reviewer saw; sounds excellent!
I think the series has really copped out (and continues to cop out) on the character realities of both Deja and her mother. In general, based on the information we’ve been given, these characters would have lived a much tougher life, and they’d be much more affected by it, than what’s been portrayed. This is actually…
Excalibur is NOT a B-movie. It’s art.
Or the Zero Matter that infected Whitney Frost in Agent Carter.
Best thing about this episode? We’re finally rid of Kasius. His monotone HAL-9000 meets William Shatner via Frank Gorshin (too much?) delivery of every line was unbearable. Was that first scene in this episode 20 minutes long? Whatever. Either the actor, the character, the concept (or some combination thereof) was…
And if we have other things to do besides watch the most boring major sport in North America we have no idea what time the show will actually start. Maybe they’re using “This is Us” to boost Super Bowl ratings ;-)