circumvrent
Circumvrent
circumvrent

Just for discussion’s sake, a season of Archer will put you out for approximately a commercial-free month of Hulu (I’m not a big rewatcher, so seeing a lot of these once is good enough for me).

I think these are all things out of their control — John Landgraf has expressly said he doesn’t want to license things to Netflix.

“Bitch better have my money.”

Wow, Season 8 of ARCHER is apparently Hulu-only for the first time ever (they’re getting it on February 5). Hulu’s becoming more and more essential.

That’s awesome. I should have figured that, because the poster caught my eye, it must have some significance.

Maybe, but I thought it was something a little more modern. I’m going to go listen to it again and report back.

As a matter of fact, Derek Kolstad, who wrote the first two films, was on Jeff Goldsmith’s when the sequel came out, and said he imagined the third film as a play on a Japanese film I’m blanking on, with Wick homeless on the street taking care of a kid.

Echoing everybody else’s sentiments to say I’m not, in general, a big binge-er. I was hyped for BOJACK to come back this weekend, but around episode 4 I could feel that these were going too quickly, that I should dial back and really enjoy them (BOJACK is also the rare streaming show that still gives a shit about the

You make some excellent points, and while I certainly can’t fault them for trying to get in as much story as possible, that gradual passage of time is one of the things the earlier seasons of the show was so good at.

Definitely not feeling these wild time jumps. 86 to 90 was a revelation, and 90 to 93 was a fun way to kick off the season, but an episode that spans 8 months+ is both confusing and whiplash-y, and the whole thing winds up feeling uncohesive — “hey, I’m serious about and dedicated to semi-retiring to this plot of land

Okay, Tron Draper is pretty hilarious.

"No, he was a stripper."

I thought the two Frasier-esque episodes they did last year (the smart one house and the cabin one) were both pretty good.

I had the same reaction as Ashley… at first. I have to admit by the end, the episode was so good, I was able to put Brown out of my mind (partially because he didn't really have anything to do during the episode). And then I started to think that perhaps Brown was cast BECAUSE he gives a significant portion of the

Erica had an encyclopedic knowledge of recreational pharmaceuticals… can't imagine that would've been much help in identifying anti-psychotic. As an aside I appreciated her having a role in an A-story for once.

The closest 1:1 analogue is really the Corleones, which George Sr for Vito, Buster for Fredo, GOB for Sunny, Lindsay for Connie and Michael for… Michael.

… and most likely Tito's.

Except it's not "really" Columbine, or any other mass shooting, since we know that those events are premediated and significantly less dispassionate, and stem from certain fascinations in the shooter(s), all of which were absent in the kid from American Crime. I always felt it was more of a riff on the sort of

Man, as someone who loves a good brainless procedural, I find BULL offensive on every level. It's slightly more grounded than say, WESTWORLD, but there's not a moment of it that is believable from a legal or human perspective. All of those characters should be in jail.

Counterpoint: no.