carrawayy
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carrawayy

Top Chef Masters continued its Pretty Good streak with last week's episode; I don't particularly like Curtis Stone but I do like the idea of this week's main challenge, cooking for that kind of audience.  I empathize with the sous chefs a great deal, but at the same time, I do have to admit the side-battles are pretty

Fair enough.  It didn't stick with me but I can see its merits.

I think it's okay to compliment something highly but realize its limitations.  I completely agree with this line in particular: "everything on Paracosm is a cozy blend."

Cool review, thanks for this.  Another title to add to the list of books that I should read but forgo so I can look at pictures of shiba inu puppies on the internet.

"If you don't win, you're fired."
(awkward laughter)
"No, really, I'm going to fire you."

I'm not as big a fan of Killer Mike as most are, but start to finish this is two guys at the top of their game.

Yup.

I'd like to think that, after the end of The Fall, Karen Gillan swoops into Lee Pace's life and mends his broken heart.  I guess Michael Rooker can play the grown-up version of the little girl.

Korra is outstanding for the most part, as far as animation quality goes, and I'd say it's one of the best animated series that has tried to follow the trail of depth and maturity that B:TAS blazed.  Whether intentional or not, there are shades of villains like B:TAS's Mr. Freeze in Korra's first season's antagonists.

I think the script and structure of the scenes' arrangement were both fine, but the directing felt weak to me.  Lots of people appearing from off-frame and stabbing/slitting throats, so that by the time Catelyn was killed, it was almost humorous in a really macabre way.  "Hi *knifeknifeknife* bye *poof*".

Kings was great :(

There's a recurring theme in Ramsay's BBC show The F Word where he raises an animal in his backyard, lets his kids play with it, and then slaughters it and cooks it to teach them where food comes from.  I think MasterChef contestants should have to go through the same process.

Probably the most depressing thing I've read today.

Tumbleaf Coddington of the Pryce-Vincent Boys' Academy in Tussings, England, will now spend the rest of his summer holidays crying to himself.

They are terrifying, and delicious, and terrifyingly delicious.

Pretty sure the ostrich in AD is the same ostrich from Cheryl/Carol's hallucination in Archer.

There were far fewer outright laughs across the season, but the overall emotional payoff and character development (or lack thereof) in the Michael/George Michael storyline was worth muscling through the low points for me.

Zaireeka with more incest, I think.

As long as you can keep the timeline and context straight for each scene and episode, I think you should be fine.  I just finished all 15 episodes watching off-and-on since midnight, and as others have said, it plays like one huge episode.  However, the ordering does continue to add layers.  The Michael/George Michael

Have you ever even been on a plane you piece of shit.