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Matt Steele
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This is going to make me sound like such a bitter old man for only being 31 years old, but I remember when I was in middle school and high school (1995-2002) and nobody "ironically" liked anything. If you liked Journey, you were an out of touch loser whose parents probably listened to bad music. If you listened to

Highly disagree with this statement. Go listen to In Your Honor or There Is Nothing Left To Lose and you'll hear Foo Fighters at their most dynamic and experimental, and the songs are actually there, unlike what Nickelback records. Nickelback may jump from near-metal on some songs, to quiet-loud grunge anthems, to

I saw them at Fenway Park this year, and I agree with every single thing written here. I was a huge fan of the debut when it came out, loved The Colour and the Shape, and then I was into primarily underground heavy music for the duration of high school and college. When I got out of college, they released Echoes,

Right, because Lost, unlike every single TV show in the history of ever, should have had the ending mapped out all along, apparently.

Even though "Scott's Tots" is one of the most polarizing episodes of The Office, the moment where Erin tries to justify Michael's horrible actions by saying the students tried harder because they thought they were getting a scholarship is a horrible moment storytelling-wise, but a great one in terms of building up

Freddy's song where the lyrics just consist of naming different pasta types always gets me. "Spaghetti. Fusilli. Egg Noodles."

"Jerry is both the schlemiel AND the schlemazel of this office." - Ron Swanson

Not just Leslie, but everybody in the town. Nobody in Pawnee likes calzones. Ben's Low-cal Calzone Zone would never have worked in Pawnee.

Yes, Ben singing along and nailing every word of the chorus in his trusty Letters to Cleo t-shirt is one of my favorite moments in the entire series. Then again, Donna's cousin Ginuwine singing "Pony" as a tribute to Lil' Sebastian from the same episode is also so genius.

Speaking of that, the Jerry Cantrell song "Leave Me Alone" is the perfect choice for the end credits. Also, the part where Chip has hacked the computer system in Broderick's office and the scene is scored to "Hey Man, Nice Shot" is perfectly ominous and ridiculous. "Hair plugs! Hair plugs! Hair plugs!"

And Snoop is really funny in that movie too. Jason Bateman as the brains behind the criminal mastermind Vince Vaughn was also a good bit of casting. I'll give Todd Phillips credit that that movie doesn't seem like the typical Todd Phillips movie.

The way he's just clearly not giving a shit about anything she's saying during the date is so funny to me. I loved that movie when I was 13, but it's so much better now that I'm 31. If that movie's on TV, I'm usually watching the whole thing.

That's by far the most believable wig I've ever seen Stoll wear (which is why I never even gave The Strain a chance; come on, Guillermo, nobody's buying that hair!). And also his best performance.

Oh my god I hope that's a true story. That is hilarious.

The fact that he's playing Wii Tennis as a means of physical exercise during one scene always makes me laugh.

Hollywood Handbook's analysis of this film's trailer in the Teaser Freezer segment was one of the funniest podcast moments I've heard all year.

Buried is one of the most unique thrillers I've ever seen, and he is fucking awesome in that movie.

BEENAWHII!

I love this movie and I think Kristen Stewart is really great in it.

So Batman kills Superman at the end of that movie, right? Right.