The guy who wrote the book seems to have essentially just done it to see what it would be like, so…. probably not.
The guy who wrote the book seems to have essentially just done it to see what it would be like, so…. probably not.
I'd believe it for Fox or NBC, but CBS?
"How does everyone manage to not suffocate stuck inside of Topaz?"- didn't Topaz leave everyone's noses uncovered?
I feel like for him to be "owned" she'd need to have given a cleverer insult than that.
There's nothing wrong with that route. Breaking Bad runs the gamut in terms of bad things happening leading to change- cancer, men dying, women dying, children being poisoned, whatever.
I'm surprised by how vaginal the whole junk room structure was.
Given that we've seen she's alive in the future, it's hard to feel worried for her safety.
Kaitlin Olson's presence on the Mick doesn't seem to have changed things.
Also, is Monica actually that good at her job? We've seen she's loyal, not much beyond that.
Is that sexism, or is it because Monica's antics have given her so little sway in the company that she can't say no to this sort of thing? He saw it was a bad investment, he knew he could force someone else to take the fall. I seriously doubt Laurie's reason for giving him that kind of power was based on his genitals.
I'll admit to not knowing much about the exact causes of diabetes, but Big Head's pretty skinny. Does he ingest anything other than the giant sodas? And maybe they're diet.
"It’s a shame that it’s immediately sabotaged by the worst part of the episode, Erlich speaking faux Mandarin in the Coleman Blair meeting and later pushing Big Head out of the project by claiming Jian-Yang’s culture won’t let him accept help. Jian-Yang-related humor always has a casually racist quality about it, this…
It's weird how much better a mother she is than Betty.
Really? I'd say it's going for a very similar tone, pacing, the music's almost identical, the woman cohost is very Jenna. It's not as good, but other than that it seems similar.
The Wikipedia article on the term makes it seem like it started out being pretty standard, to the point of being fairly official. https://en.wikipedia.org/wi…
Maybe I'm overestimating the draw of fame, or the fame of Huell, but I feel like there must be enough Breaking Bad fans out there for "hey, I was Huell" to be a solid pickup line.
Pai is against Colbert and net neutrality? What a combo.
I remember Kung Fu Panda being reasonably good. I haven't seen it since it came out, but it seemed adequate.
It's a word that started out not being racist, has non-racist equivalents with other nationalities, and became derogatory over time for reasons that I can't quite find. It's in similar territory to something like "negro". It's dated, but at the end of the day I can't be too upset with someone saying something that was…
I think it's probably good for what it is, but I doubt it's anything incredible.