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Steve H
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Seriously? You're saying you shouldn't trust Rick? He is literally ALWAYS right. Rick is essentially the Jack Bauer of the Walking Dead. His decisions may be tough to stomach, but they're the right ones.

Trey and Matt have even said they are not big fans of the show's first 3 seasons, especially season 2. They still made good satirical points back then, but the show was crude and hadn't found its identity yet. Some changes started after the movie, and once Kenny came back in season 7 and they ended the gag of killing

I recall Trey and Matt saying, in regards to the show's longevity, that they're lucky they've managed to create a show that isn't about one or a few people; it's about a town. And they're right. South Park has nearly endless ammunition thanks in part to its plethora of character. Of course staying incredibly current

I'm surprised no one is really mentioning the thematic link between Trump and Jenner this week. The best joke of the episode was that Mr. Garrison's support and applause grew with every idiotic and/or douchy statement he made. Likewise, Jenner got applauded for running over pedestrians. I feel like there is a central

Geez, I know the main story here is the curveball of making this about Ted and Robin, but are we really gonna let them off the hook for that stupid Barney ending? Right when it feels like everyone's favorite player is back, they give him an ending that you'd see in an Adam Sandler film.

Terrible episode. 1 joke beat into the ground again and again along with weird racism. F-

I personally am enjoying Vince Vaughn's performance; I agree that his character gets boring/off track when he's just talking with the wife but I don't think that's Vaughn's fault. The conflict between them is just so adherent to basic TV spouse problems which is on the writers if you ask me.

Not really, some of BB's best action scenes had minimal blood and gore. Take Salud for example. Plus, it was pretty badass the way Mike faked alcoholism and then turned the tables on them. His "Yeah, that's what I would've done," as he pulls out his real gun is right up there with Walt's "This is not meth" for most

Yeah, I kind of also get that sense that the show has been lacking in unity. With the exception of the first two episodes, you could pretty much watch any of these in any order with minimal consequences. There's a bit too much of the sense that each episode exists in its own vacuum.

I especially loved how Mike's "alcoholism" was really part of his plan all along. Gilligan is always good at making things initially appear one way, then slowly giving us puzzle pieces that show what is REALLY going on.

The only point at the episode I felt hooked in was when Wilson started calling House an ass at the funeral. Interest faded once he got interrupted by the (surprise!) living House. Also, when did this show stop being about solving medical cases and start being about the world's most one-sided friendship? Please. As if

The only point at the episode I felt hooked in was when Wilson started calling House an ass at the funeral. Interest faded once he got interrupted by the (surprise!) living House. Also, when did this show stop being about solving medical cases and start being about the world's most one-sided friendship? Please. As if

Kind of a cheap trick, spending a whole episode on him surviving his aggressive chemotherapy (the day of treatment was supposed to be the only realistic threat to him once he went the aggressive route), only to have it all be for nothing, as the tumor is still there. It's also pretty cheap taking the half-measure of

I feel like if this patient's case had aired in one of the first 2 seasons, we would've been rewarded with some awesome, unusual final diagnosis. Instead the writers turned it into yet another opportunity for the show to take as neutral of a position on religion as possible. Seriously, what is the point? Since season