It almost seems like this will basically have to be the final season from the look of things, although I sorta thought that after each of the other two seasons so who knows.
It almost seems like this will basically have to be the final season from the look of things, although I sorta thought that after each of the other two seasons so who knows.
Yeah, and at that point it’d just be he-said, she-said - Lorne will either say nothing or deny it and conveniently nobody else knew about it.
Certainly seems real and not at all an unverifiable-by-design (“Don’t ask Will, he doesn’t know because Lorne made me pinky-swear not to tell anybody!”) load of BS designed to sell an otherwise uninteresting memoir.
She doesn’t actually do karaoke, for what it’s worth, she immediately falls over after wrestling the microphone away from the band. It’s a quick little blackout gag.
I really got the sense watching this that it was basically a gender-swapped Grown-Ups*, albeit with way funnier/more talented people surrounding the lead.
I mean, they showed Barry shooting her twice in this episode.
I think she’s just supposed to seem super naive and overly chummy, she was always inviting Loach to hang out too. I agree with the person who posted elsewhere that it seems like her goofball nature will ultimately be a red herring and she’ll come across some piece of evidence that ties Barry to Moss’ murder eventually.
They did mention that Ronny’s daughter was still out there at the beginning of this episode, so hopefully the show doesn’t just drop that thread, which I agree would be a mistake and make that episode seem even more oddly non-canon.
The last paragraph gets at what seems like the fatal flaw of this movie - setting it on Earth with real actors, instead of having it be a cartoon set on Mobius.
Saw Robinson on the main stage at Second City a few years ago, the cast also included Richardson, along with Brad Morris and Mike O’Brien. It’s been really cool watching so many of them wind up in SNL and other shows.
It was also the kind of action movie cartoon version of superglue - like in action movies how nobody can manage to get a tiny strip of duct tape off their mouth, if you’ve ever gotten superglue on your hand you know that:
Well, it wasn’t just the feral kid, there was also the way that both Barry and Ronny sustain beatings that would kill a horse, with Ronny surviving a broken windpipe *and* a gunshot to the head, and also the way that Barry and Fuches are able to move about freely all day: Barry is seen by a group of people as he walks…
Also, I think you could easily make an argument that this episode in fact proves that Barry is *not* a “good person,” since he takes further contracted killings with a corrupt police officer instead the moral, ethical thing to do, which would be to turn himself in rather than murder more people in exchange for freedom…
I actually asked the same question and my wife pointed out that she thought it was Loach. However, I just checked and it’s not Loach, it’s a white-haired guy.
I suppose they could pretty neatly retcon it into having all been Barry’s perception being off after the first time he gets knocked out (and possibly concussed) when fighting Ronnie.
I think the police officer who Fuches crashed into was Loach.
The titular “What?!” of last week’s episode and pretty much the entirely of this week has been the hardest I’ve laughed at this show in a walk.
It almost feels like if they want to do a “real time” episode again, they should just make it actually live, this kind of felt like one of 30 Rock’s live episodes, but without the added novelty of it being performed live.
It seemed like there was a lot of characters being vocally annoyed that things were taking too long, which made the real-time aspect feel mostly like it was dragged out instead of compressed.
I thought the same thing, a lesser show wouldn’t have been able to resist that beat, which would’ve been overly “neat” and not emotionally realistic IMHO (plus they just did effectively that exact thing on BoJack).