cpjonesav79
cpjonesAV79
cpjonesav79

I agree about TLo's coverage of the show last year. I felt the same about their Project Runway coverage too. Not that I want anyone to be forced to review anything they might not enjoy anymore. It just sucks when you like something that someone you admire/respect isn't as into it as they once were while you're

Max was also adorable while trying to give Sasha Belle confidence in her presumed lip sync. One thing Max has over Tammie Brown (whom I loved fyi) is that she's lasted longer than both of Tammie's seasons.

I've been looking around online and the show doesn't seem to be getting the same coverage it used to. Tom and Lorenzo dropped their coverage this year (much like they did with Project Runway) and with Untucked going to Youtube over Logo, I hope the show's popularity hasn't crested yet. Maybe as T&L said in their

I was getting scared they had dropped coverage of the show for a minute…or few hours.

See below, but you're not missing much with the new season of Untucked.

It's now a Youtube show. You can also watch it on Logo's website where they embed the video. It's got more of a behind the scenes and muted vibe to it than the vibrant silliness it used to be. You see more of the crew (not the Pit Crew sadly) and what the eliminated contestant gets to go through at the end.

Yet, this episode got me back into the show (I skipped last week's episode altogether when it got a bad grade on here). That auction's hooting and hollering was terrible along with Daddy Pope's awful monologue, but Stephen's reappearance actually had me clapping and then Olivia shooting the kidnapper in the knee had

Guesses for the actor movie reel scenes during nomination announcements (if they do it at all - sometimes they don't which sucks)…
Bradley Cooper - where he's staring at the television in a PTSD daze
Steve Carell - the annoying interview scene when he's in the chair from the trailer
Rosamund Pike - confrontation scene

I haven't watched in two weeks and had almost forgotten it was back on until seeing this review of an episode that aired two days ago. I hope I can remember to watch the finale.

August: Gotham County, starring Meryl Streep as Batkid.

I missed a few during the Who Wants to Be A Millionaire years and a few during Desperate Housewives early days too I think. But I've seen about 80-85% of them I think.

Speaking of how rarely The Good Wife consistently uses a POC character, when "Evan" was mentioned as the lead attorney for Neil Gross's case, I thought it was Taye Diggs. What happened to his character on the show?

I liked it. I didn't think last week's episode was that terrible, especially with the giant leaps of reality based storytelling they've done over the years but I always understood the criticism for the most part. I've come here for years to be shocked the reviewer liked the episode when I hated it or vice versa, so

It's so weird how I remember how sympathetic he was in the first season. His character had trouble like the repeated attempts at rap, but his wife was lying to him about being pregnant for months and his discovery and ensuing fight with his wife was one of decent pieces of acting he did on the show. If only he got

I kept waiting for them to say Emma died during childbirth to give Will an "interesting" story arc for the season and then for Will and Rachel to hook up on the finale, but thankfully none of that happened…yet.

His giggles are quite enjoyable though even if he laughs at terrible Kathy Griffin "jokes".

Except he was a decent wingman to James and even tried to warn him during the fire before Grantham went on to do so. His little sigh when James went into the MILF's bedroom was sympathetic to me at least. The Baxter/Thomas melodrama does seem lame, but I'm guessing Baxter has another secret (she got pregnant by her

Cue Whoopi Goldberg saying its not rape rape.

I too was bummed we missed out on Agony's reprise, but sort of understood why they did it. Rapunzel and her Prince get short shrift a bit in the movie, but they certainly get a better ending than the play. I wasn't sure if I liked that and the other changes they make in the movie adaptation. The Baker's wife and

Most of the deaths appear off-screen, so I doubt he'd get scared by them. One major character's death caused a lady sitting next to me in the movie theater to cry out, "NO" but is probably okay for your son.