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Heroes wasn’t his show (though he was responsible for arguably the best episode). He was a hired gun. Everyone knew going in he’d go off and do his own show if he got the chance. Heroes was also cancelled before he even did Mockingbird Lane. In any case, it’s not at all unusual for television writers to create

Being closed ended stories helps. 1883 was pretty good (but with some obvious flaws). 1923 was as silly as the mothership, though. The whole season is just a lot of wheel spinning because they have 16 episodes to tell the story instead of 8.

They were probably offering him next to nothing to make a cameo and he didn’t want to do it because it’s a pain in the ass to get in the suit for a joke and they’d offer less than next to nothing for the rights to use his face in perpetuity so it’s a no brainer to say no to that, too, when the gist of his scene was

I don’t remember anyone liking Juggernaut in that movie, not even the use of the meme line.

He also scripted a character that was a VERY thinly veiled swipe at Cary Joji Fukunaga because he was jealous the Fukunaga was getting so much praise for the show.

Come on, just because that guy is being a dick is no reason to insult the real Timothy Dalton, who is still a steadily working actor.

Any golden age for kids television is the era you grew up in. Though it’s difficult to argue with the massive numbers those Schneider shows got, of course, try and convince a 40 year old that the golden age of Nick WASN’T when you could watch Hey, Dude, Salute Your Shorts, and Clarissa Explains It All.

John Fogerty and David Byrne “suffered” from the same problem - they were just WAY more talented than their bandmates, but that made the bands so good, the bandmates started to think they were on the same level creatively. When Fogerty had enough of Stu and Doug and told them, “Fine, you want 1/3rd of the say, do

But to not recognize that Margot Robbie and Gerwig made something timeless out of a subject that nobody was expecting?”

Tony had a very good reason for killing him, but he wasn’t fully sure that Paulie was a rat who almost started a war.

Netflix really hasn’t carried many pre-1980 movies to stream of late. It wasn’t that long ago where the vast majority of pre 1980 films available for streaming were mostly flicks from India, including a very odd Bollywood remake of Dirty Harry.

He is not. He’s just a shithead from Buffalo with shithead parents. This is the first time I’ve ever seen anyone claim he’s a wine heir.

But then Disney seems to be rushing the rehab narrative...”

I thought Hello Ladies was pretty great cringe comedy and Outlaws is a lot of fun. Neither close to the peaks of The Office or even Extras, but quite good.

The jury could have convicted Godejohn on lesser charges, but they opted for the most severe one. Gypsy of course was more sympathetic, but I don’t think its the slam dunk self defense case people here seem to believe since she manipulated someone else into committing the murder for her. Neither did her attorneys,

Considering Godejohn got convicted of first degree murder, she probably made the right call in not taking her chances with a jury.

What her mother put her through was horrible, but that’s just not how self defense works, nor should it. They meticulously planned her death.

What her mother put her through was horrible, but that’s just not how self defense works, nor should it. They meticulously planned her death.

Yeah, that’s all it is, a fun thing that people try to overplay. 

It’s just people wanting to feel smarter than everyone else. My least favorite is “John Mason is actually James Bond, The Rock is a James Bond movie”. The casting of Connery and some of the backstory is obviously meant as a nod to James Bond, but it’s a different character. You’re not smarter than people for seeing