dddrew
dclowd9901
dddrew

ITT, every show I love.

You seriously gleaned nothing from his escapades trying to get back into town? I don't want to blow your mind here but sometimes it's the journey more than the destination.

Eh, this very reason is why I stopped watching Walking Dead. I'm not saying they need to meet the same moral standards, but just not be mentally retarded.

The show is about faith, among other things. There are already myriad examples of the show giving us the option between a cruel understanding of reality or a beautiful moment of faith. It may just be that what this show really is is an illustrated version of: "If what you believe makes you happy, who gives a shit if

I think it's to highlight the BS of such assertions. If you said "I'm sorry for your loss to me," I'd assume you were talking about my dead brother. We all have profound losses we can attribute such a statement to.

I think you're making too much of Ghost Patti. She's explained how Kevin might know about her private life (being married to her psychologist), and Tower Joe could just have been acknowledging Kevin talking to an imaginary friend. I wouldn't put much stake into her presence; the show does a great job of leaving outs

I would have liked a bit more analysis of this episode. Granted it was a bit more run-of-the-mill, but simply saying "place matters" seems to sell it short a bit.

That would be like judging the Mona Lisa on its merits as a summer blockbuster. If I'm reading an opinion, I want it to be centered around what the show is attempting to do, not what it is not.

"Inappropriate," yes, that's exactly the word I was looking for when I saw the credits. They just don't match the tone of the show, and not in some kind of ironic or interesting way. They just flat-out suck.

IMO the opening credits for S2 of TD were the best part about S2, but that isn't saying much.

It's statistically likely that at least a couple of us will be dead before the next season.

The thing is, this episode never got to the heart of those stories, which is our desire to 1) feel marginalized (less a focal point here) and 2) feel free to murder with impunity, a token natural instinct. Rick sort of touches on the latter a lot by mentioning Morty's trying to suffocate his natural impulses, but by

Isn't that kind of how Season 2 of Breaking Bad went down?

One of Seinfeld's best episodes is simply a string of IMRs starting from the end of the story and going to the beginning. One of the best jokes is when Seinfeld tells Elaine "Bless you" and THREE SECONDS EARLIER she sneezes.

Go back to watching Archer. This was an Archer episode. Rick and Morty has shown us greatness. Don't settle for this.

Basically, immediately after the ep, I had to find that piano version of The Pixies "Where Is My Mind". Here it is: https://www.youtube.com/wat…

I'm inclined to agree. It's just crossed the line to Breaking Bad mid season 2. I'm waiting for Breaking Bad season 3.

It was worse than twisting the knife. It was just a cheap shot. In a season with so much muddled storytelling and throwaway events apropos of nothing, it felt like Pizzolato watched this last episode and thought, "Jesus, I didn't feel a damn thing for these characters this whole time." Then had ILM add an unsent

I'd say it's more about not having anyone to call on it. Matthew McCaughnehey's lines in S1 would've been as laughable as they are in the Lincoln commercials if Woody wasn't there to call bullshit. That was the magic.

Seriously. So incredibly schlocky, I would've stopped right there.