Really, what reaction did you expect from your "let me tell you the story how the non-ignorant one in our family is actually the ignorant one!!" post?
Really, what reaction did you expect from your "let me tell you the story how the non-ignorant one in our family is actually the ignorant one!!" post?
Don't do what Darren Doane does.
I think Busy Warehouse Employee is my favorite comment of all time.
"You know what you two need? A little comic strip called "Love Is…". It's about two naked eight-year-olds who are married."
It's easy. You just have to draw diggity, and when they guess that make an "almost" hand gesture.
It doesn't have to mean anything, but that's the first thing I thought. Reminds me of the Katey Sagal interview: "The MWC actors have all done really well! Ed O'Neill, Christina Applegate, and you."
The short film this is based on is so adorable. Yay for gay kids finally getting their fluffy romances (see also: this year's Jongens/Boys).
Tell them I hate them.
Best episode of season one is a tie between Slurm Factory and When Aliens Attack for me. "Fresh from his bloody triumph over the pacifists of the Gandhi Nebula, 25-star General Zapp Brannigan!"
I just rewatched that bit and I forgot what a mild-mannered, kindly old guy voice the Professor originally had. I definitely prefer the crazy jerkass he became, but "…I am already in my pajamas" is still funny.
The most dated episode from the original run must be the one where they surf the Internet. I guess they coudn't have seen coming that ten years later a mention of AOL would seem like coming from the Stone Age.
I think Bender's Big Score is brilliant, and among the best "episodes" of the entire show. The others are all pretty uneven, though.
The only one who's given this a "fantastic" review is Rex Reed. Which is probably all you need to know. This looks truly insufferable.
Sad thing is, I doubt the "teenage" part.
8, yes. 9 I'd already consider to be pretty firmly outside it, although it's still qute good.
That's a good one - it makes fun of both sides of the conflict.
"so we have that weird phrase suggesting that Hitchcock working in the 70s is somehow intrinsically odd."
The final minute of "Silver Springs" is probably my favorite vocal performance ever.
It was released as the B-side to Go Your Own Way. However on recent edition it's always included on the regular Rumours album.
Tango has an amazing singles run (Everywhere/Big Love/Little Lies/Seven Wonders) but there's a decent amount of filler on the album too. Plus this was the point where Stevie seemed like a guest performer on her own band's records. Her voice was completely shot and the two songs she wrote go absolutely nowhere.