I work seven evenings a week and don't DVR, so you can imagine how little I watch.
I work seven evenings a week and don't DVR, so you can imagine how little I watch.
I drifted away from Justified myself, but I liked it. Someone here compared it to Magnum, PI: sometimes funny, sometimes serious, always cool.
Eastbound and Down's series finale might have been the most epic series finale I've ever seen.
I'm doing everything I can on my end to get people to watch Boardwalk Empire.
Shameless stepped it up this year. It went from being "watchable" to being Showtime's best series that could rival HBO's elite dramas.
"We promise never to ink out a pubic hair…"
In the first season, even Picard was bland. Yar never had a chance to grow as a character.
I thought that was cool, the idea that Captains and leadership know ultra secret stuff to which the audience isn't privy.
Don't watch it; it's awful. And I like A View to a Kill and Quantum.
I didn't see it until 2009. The entire film is stupid and ridiculous, but the ending is like something that would happen in a Transformers movie.
There's something about that photo that looks more redneck than their current look.
There's at least one called "Palin's Angels," and a guy I know posts against the government while logged onto the internet at a public library.
They watch Bravo and Logo.
I want to comment on the Cuervo commercials with Lay Liotta. He looks like a grumpy sourpuss, those other dudes look like fun guys having a good time. I'd rather hang with them and drink what they're drinking.
You know this shot of Sulu:
He's in the discussion, without a doubt, but he's Scotty, Data, and Seven of Nine combined compared to Hoshi and Travis.
Hoshi and Travis were *by far* the two blandest main characters in all of Star Trek. I don't even know who would be in third place. Tasha Yar?
I pretend that the ENT theme has no lyrics, and that it's performed by John Williams and the London Symphony Orchestra.
One of the worst films I've ever seen, and I love the first one.
Chris Rock joked about how when he went on talk shows, he had to be funny, else audiences would assume his movie wouldn't be funny, but Bruce Willis wasn't expected to kill people.