breakingrad
ToddG
breakingrad

Somebody's gotta maintain that old desktop in the Teller-Morrow office.

He likes cereal…

Is it possible that either Linc isn't who he says he is, or that no one higher up the food chain than him knows what he's doing?  I guess that might be too far fetched.

Man, does the SoA need a mass email list or something for breaking news.  Pretty sure we saw every single character individually in different scenes over the past two episodes either do a double take of Gemma's battered face or learn about Piney's death, or (in many cases) both.

I thought the reclining scene was more than made up for by that goofy grin he had as he peered in at the mayor's meeting with the sheriff.

I thought it looked like Opie's porn star wife (whose name currently eludes me), but that seems unlikely.

I find it perfectly believable for a torpedo to be so elusive.  Especially if it got a look at the script first.

Maybe by the 24th century, our language de-evoles to include the term "de-evolve."

It made me laugh quite a bit when Wesley was looking at Geordi's engine modifications and told him he needed to add a "second polarity inverter."

Increase the flash gordon noise and put more science stuff around.

#OccupyDorvanV

What?  Why don't you like this?

I'm not going to get fired from my professional AV Club review reader position, am I?

I'm with you regarding the Office, but I disagree when you cite P&R as an example of a show where no work gets done and there isn't a narrative. Leslie's attempts to accomplish meaningful things in city government are a pretty integral part of the show, and it generally has a pretty solid and well-defined narrative

You clearly should've punched a hole in your drywall to look for psychic residue from when you wrote the note and subsequently angrily erased it after it laughed at you.

Wouldn't it be Wadzia?

Oh, are we supposed to be clicking on that?

I believe the reason nobody on the Enterprise heard about the incident in EotB was explained near the end.  The murderer threw their bodies into the plasma before jumping in, so everybody assumed it was an accidental plasma discharge of some kind that killed all 3.

In my opinion, the real problem is the obsession with letter grades and/or numerical scores.  If the review in question did not have what is generally perceived as a negative score attached to it, and instead consisted merely of the text, I doubt we'd be hearing an outcry remotely approaching the intensity of the

I disagree with whoever said that a rating above R isn't needed, saying it's the parents fault if they wander into something wildly inappropriate for their kids.  The implication seems to be that they should've learned enough about the movie prior to going to it, but isn't that same information what the R/NC-17