cobravision--disqus
Cobravision
cobravision--disqus

I bailed halfway through the pilot preview, which was a mistake. Luckily, there was a lull in programming during the holidays and because of the good buzz and Emily Kapnek, I finally watched the show.

Troy Gentile is indeed a goddamn genius with line readings. I will laugh heartily at the most innocuous Barry lines just because of the delivery.

While the embarassing tape is common to both episodes, the plots arising from them are different. It's like not watching because not long ago they did a story about Bev being obsessed with her family. When the premise of the show is that Adam continously videotapes his family, embarassing videotapes will figure into

Instead of a letterboxed VHS version of the movie, they used the 16:9 DVD version that was vertically squeezed on the 4:3 TV, making Sally look all squished.

Natalie specifically kept Keith to compete with Jon for immunity (as the last three were Nat, Jon, and Keith, it was a good call). Alec was so bad at all the challenges that he would be useless in that function.

She does that thing a lot of young actresses do, where they take sharp breaths like they're hiccuping to indicate emotion. Doesn't work for Kristin Kreuk either.

Barry appears to be a virgin.

I still think Skye/Daisy is the weak link in the acting, but she's not hobbling the show as much as she did season one. Chloe Bennet is still better than most of the cast of The Flash.

It was a funny feint — the previous episode left you wondering if they were going to kill off Mac, and then they kill of Trip.

It wasn't pointless, it just rushed by so fast. I wished they had taken some of the time from the shooting and fighting scenes and budgeted more to Tripp and Whitehall's deaths to make them stand out more.

Start with episode 16, End of the Beginning and then watch Captain America:Winter Soldier about two episodes in. It's still shaky, but at least it gets past most of the Monster of the Week nonsense.

They're totally fucking with the audience (or at least the Chrono Police in the audience). I LOL'd at Barry standing in front of the TV during the New Year's broadcast and very obviously obscuring the last digit in the year (not even sure how you concluded it was a 6). They will have a reference to something in 1982

They've only aired 5 episodes. Probably only 4 by the time the article was being written. Not a lot to hang your hat on.

I hated the first episode when I saw it, but came around by episode 3. Now I love all the episodes.

The Goldbergs, Drunk History, and Gravity Falls are notable omissions from the top 35. The Goldbergs does everything well (comedy, nostalgia, sentiment) and Drunk History is one of those rare shows where I am consistenly left gasping for air because it's so funny. Gravity Falls is just flat out wonderful.

I cannot see Lee Tergesen in anything without thinking about Tobias Beecher. He was recently in a Blacklist arc, and I kept thinking the character was Beecher.

There are only 10 episodes of Broad City and they go by so fast you could easily do it on a Saturday or Sunday, assuming you have Saturday and Sunday off.

I thought the compactness of the season prevented it from spinning its wheels like a lot of 22 episode network shows do. I loves me some UK dramas, but they have an edge because the 10-13 episode seasons make for much better pacing. 13 episode seasons are the sweet spot for dramas.

Aya Cash deserves to be #1 alone.

I took me three tries to get through the IT Crowd finale. And I've seen most of the episodes two or three times. I've watched the Internet episode at least 10 times. But the finale? Total letdown.