No I didn't.
No I didn't.
The week-long wait between "To'hajiilee" and "Ozymandias" when they first aired was particularly gut wrenching, if I recall.
We could easily get Kanye and Jeezy to reenact this dialogue for a skit on the album.
Vinyl was definitely a flawed series, but it undeniably came back at the end of the season from a dismal first six episodes, and I still think it has potential for a great second season; especially with T. Winter gone, who I believe was 70% of the problem.
No, one Jimmy Fallon is more than enough.
Oh, you don't wanna know!
Word. She was great in her guest role on Californication.
69LS is solid throughout, but "Come Back from San Francisco" by itself makes all three discs worth it.
Well, you see, when a man and a woman love each other very much…
No, there's no such thing as White History Month, Charlie Brown.
That's the worst thing you can possibly call a woman, Charlie Brown.
She had a Mendendez Brothers fetish in an earlier episode this season.
This and the Larry David episode were the two best of the season, and I can't stand Fred Armisen.
I don't deal coke; and furthermore, you're making me broke.
Tracy Chapman's self-titled debut is one of the three or four albums I've successfully listened to the entire way though in one sitting. And "Fast Car" is in my top 10 songs of all time. Nearly 20 years after first hearing it for the first time, I still get the chills.
Thees-a fuckin' Survivor show; I say we find the winner, put a gun to his head and say, "You're-a not gonna survive THEES unless you give me 20% of that fucking-a million dollars."
With Homer in the writer's room and Ron Howard as the showrunner? You can't fail.
Tupac had released four solo albums and a group album, made numerous films, died and left behind two decades worth of posthumous material at 25.
Eminem's pretty damn funny in real life and has been the musical guest numerous times, but never appeared in a sketch. You have to assume that it's due to him rejecting the idea, as opposed to Lorne and company never offering a sketch role to him.
This was actually my favorite Leslie Jones correspondent piece, mainly because it felt so sincere, given the subject matter. It was funny, but seemingly coming from a very genuine place.