darquegk
darquegk
darquegk

Horseman!

I really enjoyed the two PS2 games: the Crazy Taxi knockoff Road Rage and the GTA knockoff Hit and Run.

One of those background flute boys in Strawberry Alarm Clock is Steve Bartek, co-founder of Oingo Boingo with Danny Elfman and eventual orchestrator for his most famous scores.

I wonder if Gaga is a demon or if she's a White Indian shaman of some kind- her posture in the initial "manifestation scene" indicate she was subservient to Thomasyn, not wielding authority over her.

I'm hoping it's Paul Williams.

Ever seen the movie (or the play) "Tape?" It's a tiny indie with Uma Thurman and Robert Sean Leonard- it takes place in a single hotel room- about the interaction between three former friends, when it's revealed that two of them share a complicated sexual history: she thought they were having kinky, rough consensual

Sounds like a Tom Jumbo-Grumbo line.

Manny is slowly transforming into Humbert Humbert.

Manny's tendency towards incest has been subtle in the past, but the last season and this one have been pretty open about the fact that he's most attracted to girls he's related to, by marriage or blood.

Everyone is tonally on a different show though: Anthony Anderson and Jenifer Lewis are in a better version of a Madea film; Bow and the eldest kids are on an ABC sitcom; Diane and Charlie are in some kind of magic-realism Ryan Murphy show.

I think the ending was very nuanced: Dre has realized he's less "faithful" than he thinks, and he is the only one praying with any sincerity at the end. Everyone else's prayers are the sort of "genie wishes" or manufactured guilt he had accused himself of. Then there's Daveed Diggs, whose moment of "mental silence"

Yes. The Liam Neeson episode. Homer the Heretic is more about church than the nature of faith, I think.

Was he always the black TJ Miller, or is this a new development? I couldn't stop seeing it last now, from his outfit to his hairstyle to his speech patterns, even down to his final kiss-off where he's lying back, drinking wine and apparently not thinking about religion at all.

Black-ish did a better faith episode than The Simpsons, which is pretty much a gold star.

Jon Snow and Samwell are drinking at the tavern, when Tyrion walks in. Jon says to Tyrion, "You know, little buddy, winter is coming and my back deck hasn't been sanded or painted yet. When can you come over and do that?" Tyrion says he's pretty busy the next few weeks, can it wait until next year? Jon says, "No. You

I'm torn- on the one hand, Jedi Rocks was a little corny, but at least corny in a bland, somewhat forgettable way. Lapti Nek, however, immediately and perpetually raised the question of why Jabba the Hutt is listening to a Rick James record.

It's much like "The Goldbergs" in that it's a show that makes no pretense of taking place in anything resembling reality. It creates its own world and lives in it unrepentantly.

Drop Dead Fred is a bizarre fusion of early Tim Burton films. Like, imagine if "Pee-Wee's Big Adventure" and "Beetlejuice" were the same movie, mix in some more deliberate lifts from Fellini for the ending, and that's pretty much it.

For what it's worth, "The Goldbergs" is the best thing HM has produced in years.

"Say it loud, and there's music playing,
Say it soft- what the fuck are you saying?
Kahuna, I'll never stop saying Kahuna!"