disqusqwc89bs9ou--disqus
Toss
disqusqwc89bs9ou--disqus

Totally predicted the same thing for the same reasons. It's a tangent of Roger Ebert's Rule of Economy of Characters, the Rule of Economy of Acting Talent. Apparently it does not apply in all situations.

Hosted by Chris Hardwick

The Moon Door is a flat circle

Yes, those were all members of the band Fun. and they got their just deserts.

I think that just adds to the sense that Littlefinger is making things up as he goes along. His whole "chaos is a ladder approach" allows for that advancement he so desires, but at the same time the disadvantage of chaos is that you have to play with the cards chaos gave you.

Hodor.

None of the actors mentioned here appear to fit the bill of the character she was supposedly up for, so either they still have a couple roles yet to be officially cast or that character was cut from the movie.

Rappaport's performance is actually becoming my main test case in favor of accent work being overrated. I'd agree that the accent is pretty bad, but I think his performance has been very good overall in spite of it. He's got a terrific physical presence and while he goes very big on the Southern inflection he's able

You knew something was up with the cigarettes from the moment Picker had Boyd frisked twice and the pack was the only thing that turned up.

Glenn Kenny acting as "The Erotic Connoisseur" in The Girlfriend Experience was the first name I thought of, didn't make the list apparently.

The average age of the Fantastic Four in the 2005 movie was 30. The average age of the Fantastic Four in this movie is 29. I may not be a mathematician or anything, but I don't really think that's a terribly drastic age difference, guys.

What would make Rachel in over her head as Chief Deputy? She's probably the show's most level headed character, and other than Art she's the only person who's ever been able to regularly rein in Raylan. She also seemed perfectly capable of managing the office last episode, when Art essentially left her in charge so he

Yes, because no actor has ever shown any talent until they've been acting for at least 5 years.

Paranoid much? I've been cooking hamburgers medium rare with grocery store ground beef my entire life, as my parents did before me, and we're still bouncing around fine and healthy to this day. As for texture, that's obviously subjective.

Dude, grocery store ground beef is fine. Our bodies are not fragile china dolls that will collapse if we ingest something slightly impure. The vast majority of humans can eat some grocery store hamburger and it'll be no different than if they consumed a freshly cut steak procured directly from an organic farmer.

Honestly the Stefon sendoff from last season's finale was so perfect I just want them to leave the character in retirement.

I've loved almost every single one of their bits. The beer pong and Miley Cyrus sketches they did are probably two of my favorite things SNL has done this season.

"Still, lest you feel as though Hill was swindled out of a fortune—like the victims of his and Leonardo DiCaprio’s characters that you never see, because that would be no fun"

Well they set the bar pretty low by casting Hirsch as Belushi.

I'd agree that Olyphant has given several performances better than anything Holloway has ever done, but part of that is because he has a much more expansive body of work that has allowed him to show off his skills. Holloway had a good role on Lost, but he's never been given a part as meaty as Olyphant's characters on