damellen--disqus
DAMellen
damellen--disqus

So it was a callback to something that just barely even happened? I still don't get what makes that funny.

I didn't get the Israel joke. So Rick's actually been going on rants about Israel? That doesn't sound familiar at all. What does he say about it?

Yeah, that's pretty funny. Cabreggra still would've been better. Will they be calling him Fen too? Helps the loose rhyme scheme.

Yep, he's Gizmo Duck. The only thing I don't love about this casting choice is that they don't make his new Latin last name a duck pun. It's not like it would have to a good pun or anything. Martinegg. Feathernandez. Goostierrez. These aren't hard. But no, it's just Cabrera (Cabreggra was right there). What - Latin

Kodos? Like I the Simpsons?

Yes, it just plopped on the ground in the other world. Or Nora was lying. Or maybe what Nora experienced was more like a vision, like when Kevin goes to the hotel. All are good resolutions. And if it's true, can that guy really advertise or bring people to his machine? It took Nora forever to travel from Australia to

I agree that that interpretation wouldn't make any sense - that's why I was asking if anybody else understood it. What deal did he have with Richard? Was it just to not tell his wife about his previous wife sleeping with Ehrlich?

You didn't think so? That was what it seemed like to me, but that would make no sense so I figured it must be a reference to the past wives. It's just weird that he called it "a thing between us," referring to himself and Richard when that prior affair had nothing to do with Richard. It really made no sense at all.

I would think so, but it made it sound like Dan and Richard had some kinda flirtation.

Did anybody follow the last line? What happened between Richard and Dan? Or was he referencing Ehrlich's cheating with the last one?

Was he the older guy who was out collecting carts?

Jimmy paid that guy to fall.

I like how you call this a "neat ending where the truth comes out" when we, the audience, know full well that the truth didn't come out at all; the truth got buried under a giant pile of steaming assholery, which was a brilliant strategy on Jimmy and Kim's part, but it was bullshit nonetheless. The argument that Jimmy

It's a documentary about a college professor who was on trial for allegedly murdering his wife by throwing her down a staircase. This show is largely a spoof of it (I'm hoping that the plan, at least for the first few seasons, is to make every season a spoof of a different criminal law documentary). During the

There have been owl clues? That would fit with The Staircase, which is what this is based on. What are the owl clues?

I kinda think that after Larry gets found not guilty, we find out it really was him.

It wouldn't be inadmissible. Police need to jump through all sorts of hoops when they want to search somebody, but the defense isn't held to that standard. You can basically ask anyone for anything and if they give it to you, cool. That guy handed them the goddamn key. That's more consent than you usually get. Hell,

Prosecutors can't withhold information. Same with civil attorneys. But criminal defense…we have a lot more wiggle room.

Will that be enough?

Rather than firing off a couple examples of what it means to be stuck up and nosy in an Asianer manner (more Asianly?), I'll just say that yes, this is definitely how I read the reviewer's statement and I found it perplexing as well. Why would this lady need to be blonde or white? Stuck up nosy hypercompetitive one