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Matt Steele
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Exactly. They've done this to Louis C.K. recently, when Jay Mohr was on, complaining about how Louie and Ricky Gervais ignored him when they were all on a previous episode together. Jay was really hurt, apparently, that Louis and Ricky, who are friends, were acting like friends on the air and "excluding" him, and O &

Loved them on WAAF back in the day. As a 13 year old, they were so envelope-pushing. Their prank phone calls were hilarious. Then they came back to Boston on WBCN for a short time in 2002 before they were fired off CBS radio for the St. Patrick's Cathedral sex incident. Then they came BACK on WBCN in 2007(?), as a

And people forget that Bill Burr's Philly rant was actually a part of O and A's comedy tour that summer. They put a ton of good comedians out there for people. I don't listen to them these days, but when they were on FM, they promoted the hell out of a lot of great comedians. But Anthony is most certainly an asshole.

That line could only be said that well by Patrice O'Neil. He was so good.

Agreed. I think he put the coffee all over Ted's ass as a way of dominating and humiliating him, as if to say, you know I could have done much worse if I wanted.

I know the scenes with Daniel and Kerwin were obviously dreams within his coma. But for some reason, I felt like the scene with the "therapist" was actually a flashback to Daniel's time on the row right after Kerwin was taken away and executed. Just the way it was shot and the way he was acting, it seemed to be

That moment where you see actual Locke's body on the beach was such a HOLY SHIT moment for me. I mean, I read theories suspecting that he was in the box all along, but I thought it had to be a new enlightened Locke, especially in the bad ass ways he was standing up to Ben.

The part of that that gets missed or overlooked too much is that Locke made drawings of the smoke monster when he was a child. Clearly, a part of his consciousness was actually special and could see things; I always viewed him as a much-less-powerful Walt.

For as much as people complain about the Sideways timeline and its resolution, the character moments like that one are what made it all worth it for me. Sure, some of it was so stupid, like the Sayid/Sun/Jin/Keamy mob dealings or whatever, but I absolutely loved everything with Locke, Sawyer and Hurley in the Sideways

The best part of the Ben/Locke episodes is when the cabin actually shakes and Locke sees and hears things that Ben can't. I still guess that must have been MiB manipulating Locke, since Jacob was always in the statue?

Correct me if I'm wrong, but didn't Ben also take his lie about being born on the island with him til the end? I think only the audience and Richard knew that Ben wasn't actually born there. It'd be interesting to see the list of Ben's lies throughout the series.

After Carell leaves the show, you might as well just jump ahead to the last 2 episodes of the show. It's still a good epilogue, and you should be able to fill in any gaps that happened in the meantime.

My favorite Creed moment comes when he's talking about his job responsibilities in "Product Recall."

They also reference Lee Iacocca later on when Michael hits on the (married, we later find out) bartender, after talking about his book Somehow I Manage "Have you read Lee Iacocca's [book]?" "Read it? I own it! But, no, I haven't read it." That line always killed me. Of course Michael would own a shelf full of books

Kenny also audibly yells out, "Damn Jet Skis!" as he's hurling the glass. He's very upset that he lost a lot of money on his sale of the jet skis, apparently.

I think Jon realizes that Ned's way of doing things isn't the most realistic, logical way of doing things. Robb followed too closely in his father's footsteps, and he lost his head too.

I thought that tied back into an earlier episode in the season, where the Hound robbed the farmer. "Dead men don't need silver." I thought she was going to say that to him as she walked away.

People Power!

It also brought to mind another great Dinklage performance, "You feeling strong, my man? Call me Elf ONE MORE TIME!"

I think I'm becoming less aware of my own age as I get older, but when little girl Taystee was singing "Beautiful," I was thinking, "Okay, so this girl is about 8 years old in 2002?" Are we supposed to believe Taystee is only about 20 years old? She looks young, but that kind of threw me off, maybe because I just