Also depends of whether Archer wears his tactleneck.
Also depends of whether Archer wears his tactleneck.
no it's not.
They needed an agent who respects wood.
That's yesterday's news. comic creators misunderstanding Watchmen's success gave us the abomination that we refer to as "the 90's".
The premise reminds me (as in, it's exactly the same) of the excellent Doctor Who episode Amy's Choice, which is never a bad thing, and could be a successful US analogue of Life on Mars (as in "procedural cop show with a sci-fi-ish premise involving a car accident")
Unless one of the characters is a FOOKIN ROCKET SCIENTIST, MATE, count me out.
The official TVTropes nomenclature's Growing the Beard.
I wish you good luck.
One Tree Hill sure got weird toward the end.
From Parenthood, Dawes.
And "Wedding". Peep Show even had TWO of those.
Yup, losing the domestic premise seems the right way to move forward from losing 3 fourths of the cast.
Dieudonné's show on 1905 law on the Separation of the Churches and the State is one fine, fine one man show, and contain one of my favorite sketches ever (the parent's meeting at the end), which might be the most accurate and funny depiction of communautarism in France.
Despues de Tres cientos metros, tome la salida.
Well, at least it got a air date.
Lawrence Miles / Steven Moffat?
Yeah, I noticed that too, I heard that Spiral (Called Engrenages in France) got a good critical reception in the UK.
According to the Wikipaedia, the whole writing staff of TTOI is on it.
I'd like to see Malcolm Tucker in every show ever. well at least on channels where he can swear.
I rather liked it.
Overall I don't consider myself to be a story arc fan when it comes down to DW, because the show doesn't need it, but I don't hate it either, so I just roll along with it with cautious optimism - wich tends to sum up a huge part of my attitude towards Moffat-penned episodes last year.
In the end the…