Explore our other sites
  • kotaku
  • quartz
  • theroot
  • theinventory
    disqusq8eleuomo3--disqus
    Elf
    disqusq8eleuomo3--disqus

    #CartoonLivesMatter #BanAnvils

    It's refreshing that nobody ever has to ask "What do you think Olbermann is trying to say?"

    <picard>There are EIGHT seasons!</picard>

    I didn't recognize her as having been in Scrubs when i saw her in Argo.

    I still have a soft spot for the real finale when the squirrel-voiced intern gets Cox to admit that J.D. was the best doctor he's ever known. Even if the "He's right behind me, isn't he?" was telegraphed a mile away, it still hit that target perfectly with Cox all but admitting that he's jealous of J.D.

    But that's how it goes in real life too. You don't get to choose when the emotional stuff happens, it just happens whether you're ready for it or not.

    Did he ask to leave and they wrote him out or was the character intended to flunk out from the beginning. I remember thinking that it would take a hell of an effort to reform him and being impressed that they they didn't give him an epiphany moment. Instead, in a much more realistic scenario, he flunked out.

    I think the more re-watchable shows are the ones that don't need you to remember what the various relationship statuses were at the time of the episode. If you pick a random episode of Scrubs it could make a difference who was J.D. dating at the time, were Turk and Carla married yet, how far along into their careers

    Brendan Fraser had to die, if only for the brilliant "Where do you think you are?" moment that brought Dr. Cox back to reality.

    I thought it appropriate that Trump would court the terminally ill vote since he's already locked up the mentally ill vote.

    I said "at least", didn't I?

    Nah, Hillary is 68, so she's at least 45 years too old for Trump to hit on.

    Derp,

    Please, HIllary, please, at some point in the debate tomorrow take a pack of Tic Tacs out of your pocket and offer them to Trump. You'll be seated so you can just slide them across the table.

    The last time I heard that it was from Michael Davis, a performer who appeared on SNL a handful of times in the 80's around the same time Penn & Teller did, who said something like "A comic says funny things. A comedian says things funny… That makes me a juggler." And then he'd go on to juggle items while saying funny

    Alan Yang will be happy.

    Fred shows up only about one out of every five or six weeks these days. I don't get to stay up late enough to watch Late Night as it airs, so I watch the next day and fast-forward through any Fred segments. They've become painful at this point.

    Yeah, they operate indepedently of Cartoon Network, so think of it as a channel time-sharing deal.

    I wish Seth MacFarlane had given her some funnier material in A Million Ways to Die in the West.