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Afro Thunder
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You're right! I wish they'd distinguish better, it sometimes leaves me a bit confused as to what's actually original and what's just "Original". They kept trying to push Scrotal Recall recently, but when I found it was a British acquisition I suddenly lost some of my national pride…

Ah, that's great! I've only watched the first two so far, but I'm so glad it stays consistent. After the first season took some time to get there (at least, I think so, that was like a whole YEAR ago man), I'm really glad to see 'em knocking it out of the park this time!

You might've noticed that, on the Netflix page for the show, the "d" is missing from the "episodes" button. Turns out it's next to the season selection box, and it takes you to the episode where Bojack steals the "D" from the Hollywood sign. It's little touches like this that make me confident Netflix is putting loads

As a Brit, I'm storing up my groans until Jack the Ripper (or, worse, someone in the modern day calling themselves Hack the Ripper) shows up as special edition/platform exclusive/standalone DLC content. Then I'll release them in a flood of mild disappointment. Hmph.

Personally, I really enjoyed seeing Linda Cardellini reprise her role as Velma. After all, I feel like Hawkeye is pretty much the Velma of the MCU Avengers. …No?

I really liked this episode, but I did have a very nerdy problem with it… Brian Van Holt is, of course, Bobby Cobb on Cougar Town, which, great show, but it used to be Abed's favourite. Heck, he even appeared in it. So to have one of its stars appear in an entirely different role on Community and not even mention it?

…Actually, no… See, this is why I've been wanting to watch the show. If I can't learn about stuff from TV, how the hell AM I gonna do it?!

Oh rats, I was hoping Netflix would get it. I've never seen Seinfeld, because I'm A) a jaded millenial and B) live in the UK, where we don't understand what the deal is, so it's never on the telly. (Deal or No Deal is not the same deal, right?)

Wallflower, I've recently been watching The Shield for the first time, and following your reviews as a rather indispensable companion piece to the show. Originally, I'd planned to watch and read through all seven seasons, and leave a comment at the end expressing my gratitude to you. (In fact, I was planning to do

Ooh, this was almost exactly the finale I was hoping for! Well, with a few exceptions. (I didn't really get the whole Danny-Cyber-ghost thing at the end.) The Big Heroic Speech is a hallmark of Doctor Who - think back to The Rings of Akhaten, where the Big Heroic Speech didn't really work - but for once, I thought, we

I came away thinking that this episode was basically Mass Effect: The TV Show. Perhaps that's just because Hermione Norris looks a bit like my Femshep did, but I think the point still stands.

This is amazing! I'd love one for Angel as well …Man, I sure miss Angel.

(Un)fortunately not - I remember the ending of the last episode of Hustle, where they got back to Eddie's Bar (?) and the show's crew was deconstructing the set… Ridiculous, but delightfully meta!

I thought that was rather fun! Nicely shot too - those corridors looked really vibrant, even though they might've been made from £20 and some old polystyrene. And it reminded me a bit of Hustle, which is never bad thing! Well alright, never that bad a thing.

More than anything, especially after the weighty introduction of the Twelfth Doctor in the first two episodes, 'Robot of Sherwood' felt like one for the kids. Now kids can spoonfight in playgrounds worldwide. Now kids can pretend to blow up archery targets with toy sonic screwdrivers. Who needs dense moral debates

Wow, I didn't expect such a detailed response - thanks. I'm clearly guilty of generalising for simplicity, so I wouldn't worry about that.

One of the themes I'm more interested in so far this series is the Doctor's hypocrisy - ooh, the Doctor's sad when the out-of-place rampaging dinosaur dies, but he'll murder the out-of-place robot; ooh, the Doctor hates soldiers, but really he's a soldier himself!

I'm surprised more people haven't mentioned Dexter. So visceral, so clever, and yet so mundane too. It's just a guy making breakfast, right? It's just a shame the show itself outstayed its welcome.

I'm really very glad to hear that… I did enjoy the rest of the episode though.

Did the scenes with Justin and Kyle seem like some kind of a backdoor pilot for 'How I Met Your Dad' to anyone else?