Well, here's one from the "Cheers & Jeers" section of TV Guide's April 3-16 issue:
Well, here's one from the "Cheers & Jeers" section of TV Guide's April 3-16 issue:
Speaking of "Kingsman: The Secret Service", I noticed that once Cracked article claims that "Kingsman" is a rip-off of the "Harry Potter" series. Guess the authors failed their research and forgot that both "Kingsman" and "Harry Potter" films are based on literature and comic books. Here's the link for this one:
I was thinking the same thing. It's just like the time when "Teenage Mutant Milk-Caused Hurdles", which had some David Bowie jokes, aired on the night that David Bowie died. Creepy!
Yow! This reminds me of the time that I watched "Teenage Mutant Milk-Caused Hurdles" (with some David Bowie jokes) on the night that David Bowie died! And you didn't even mention that one either, Dennis!
I've said it before, and I'll say it again and again: Kyle, did you just fall asleep on Edward Nygma killing Officer Pinkney and then framing Gordon for it back in the episode "Mad Grey Dawn"?! Oh, and I felt sad that I thought Nygma "killed off" Lucius and Bruce with "poison gas"… which actually turns out to be…
I was thinking the same thing. It seems that Dennis missed out on Jacqueline Bouvier getting arrested during her daughter Marge's trial. Pretty funny, IMO.
"The second half of this season has seen Gordon locked up for the murder of Galavan". Um, you didn't even mention Officer Pinkney again, since he, too, was murdered by Nygma. And Tabitha is put in critical condition as well.
That seems nice, but I suppose you didn't mention Strange reciting the part from Alice in Wonderland, or (SPOILER ALERT) Azrael brutally murdering Nathaniel Barnes. Pretty scary and sad.
You know, this reminds me…
Man, you must have mangled your English. "Gordon and him realize what's going on"? "Putting all the piece together"? That's a grammar fail. Oh, and Oswald Cobblepot pulling off a Titus Andronicus or an Eric Cartman by killing Grace's children and feeding them to her! Definitely crazy!
There's a lot of messed up English here and there. And you didn't mention that Nygma killed Officer Pinkney (a supposed witness to Gordon's murder of Theo Galavan) in order to frame Gordon for the murders of both Pinkney (whom Gordon did not kill) and Galavan (whom he did kill), as well as the murders of Kristen…
Well, I find it odd that the show would use a family-friendly edited version of Drake's "Started from the Bottom" without all the cussing ("Started from the bottom, now we're here / Started from the bottom, now my whole team's here / Started from the bottom, now we're here / Started from the bottom, now my whole…
Did anyone ever notice that when Bart sprays "Graffitied by El Barto" on Hettie Mae Boggs' promo poster on the wall, Sideshow Bob (Kelsey Grammer) shows up a few minutes later, grumbling in annoyance as he cleans up the graffiti along with Snake Jailbird and other fellow inmates? That was a nice touch. Oh, and…
How could you skip out on "Bart no like! Bad medicine!", or Sideshow Bob's Emmy win scandal, or the sex puns like "choked you like a chicken" or the part where Bob and Selma sing "Somethin' Stupid" by Carson & Gaile? Reminds me:
I think you got the story all wrong, Nathan. At the beginning, according to Marge, the story begins in "the unforgettable spring of 1983", not "summer of 1983". And when the Simpson family moves in, Bart makes some noise at a pregnant Marge before joining Homer in watching the 1984 Summer Olympics (whose Krusty…
I think you got the story all wrong, Nathan. At the beginning, according to Marge, the story begins in "the unforgettable spring of 1983", not "summer of 1983". And when the Simpson family moves in, Bart makes some noise at a pregnant Marge before joining Homer in watching the 1984 Summer Olympics (whose Krusty…
You're getting close. The poem actually goes, "Cold-hearted orb that rules the night / Removes the colors from our sight. / Red is grey and yellow white, / But we decide which is right, / And which is an illusion." This appears in both "Late Lament" (the bit at the end of "Nights in White Satin") and "The Day…
Didn't anyone notice that the song that was played in the background when Bart and his new teacher (Miss Carol Berrera) walk around the world, blow stuff up and drink blood from their hearts was "Tuesday Afternoon" by the Moody Blues? (That also happens to be my dad's favorite song, by the way.)
1) And so does Sideshow Bob.